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tv   CNN Tonight  CNN  November 14, 2022 7:00pm-8:00pm PST

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good evening everyone, laura coates. this is cnn tonight. our breaking news, cnn protecting democrat, katie hobbs, will win arizona's race. defeating republican, carry. like one of the most prominent the fenders of president trump's lies about the 2020
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election. now, like as you recall. repeatedly claimed that the election was rigged. she would not have certified joe biden won arizona back in 2020. hobbs, the arizona secretary of state, rejecting republican lies about the election. let's get right to cnn's kyung lah, live for us in phoenix, tonight. john, you've been here all this time, waiting for the results to come in. of course, we now know that cnn projects that katie hobbs will be the next governor of arizona. what is the very latest? >> well, just a quick reminder that democrat winning in the state, which is considered -- you talk to people. it is a center right. state that has been the fabric of arizona. and this is the first time in more than a decade, but the democrat has won the state of arizona as governor. we are seeing a political shift in the state. what we are hearing from, tonight that those projections are out.
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republicans in this, state are really responding. especially the ones who led that charge against kari lake. because there it is and dependents. and moderate publicans, love soundly rejected her. or to show you this quote from one of those republicans. john graham, who is a republican who fundraised for katie hobbs. i'd like to republican. who said he simply could not stomach her indecency. he tells cnn, quote,. civility has won here in arizona. and across the country. i also heard, from a number of other republican strategist. these are people who actually work on campaigns. who strategize, who communicate for republicans in the state. one told me, on background, because he is actively working on campaign sailor arizona. he said, quote, kari lake told a legion of john mccain supporters across arizona that
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they could go to. tonight, they returned the favor. and what he's talking about their, norah, is a moment where kari lake and cpac said that her primary victory told -- and she expresses this to the entire crowd. she said that her campaign drove a stake in the heart of the mccain machine. this was the mccain sheen striking back. >> can, powerful words. and apparently, as you, say returning the favor. here to discuss all this right now. chief political analyst here at cnn, or a forger. cnn political commentator, charlie dent, and ashley allison. first of all, we think about where we are right now. we are in the monday after the midterm election. we are still waiting to see who finally will actually be the majority party in the house. now we know who the next governor will be. just think about this. today, liz cheney is putting out your welcome kari lake.
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this is something, this was a lot of energy. what is your reaction? >> my reaction is that somebody would like to call or punish cheaters and crooks. who told john mccain supporters to leave, and walk out the door. after john mccain more than three decades of devotion to public service. who campaigned as donald trump's mini me. was sent walking. because that was not what arizona moderates, arizona independents, or arizona republicans wanted. and i think she made a really bad bet, in the state of arizona. i think republicans are going to be looking at this in the state. as congress just saying. and saying, what did we do wrong? how did we nominate this person? how do we fix the republican party.
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>> the course correction that i want to point out. the idea here we're talking about election denialism. on one hand. but also the overall line it with trump. it does include in some respects, the idea that you were against john mccain. i mean, we remember what happened at the funeral the late senator. remember the conversations, the weather aziz acrimonious nature of the relationship as well. and the backlash has been swift, but having said that. it is not as if katie hobbs had a runaway election. kari lake was still very much in the game. this is why read the nail-biting hours here. >> arizona state that leans right. what we've seen with kari lake, is that you cannot practice the politics of exclusion, division, and subtraction. telling john mccain supporters to go to help. calling people rhinos. people may agree with you. we know, it may be the knock a supporter. i don't know how people think they're going to win elections by appealing to the most narrow segments of their base.
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having come from a swing state, a swing district. i understood math. i had to win 90% of the republicans. over half the independents. nearly 30% of the democrats to win. you don't way by saying these idiotic things that she was saying. it's as if they want to lose. we have our own version of carry that can pennsylvania that's called dog restaurant. >> he, lost handily. >> he just turned off independents. a lot of republicans. and certainly democrats. but these people don't understand that they need -- they want to win converts. they want to execute everybody. it doesn't seem to be with them. >> actually, on this point. part of the concern is plywood they think it would work? that is what the crux of the issue is. >> to gloria's point, should try to beat trump two point oh. carried like it's probably one of the pulse well-known gubernatorial candidates across the country, right now. but she lost. and i bet you, katie hobbs is not.
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katie upstate narrow zone, she was focused on a race. she would take the bait, what do you agree with or not. kari lake, she wasn't going to see the bees like so many did with donald trump. i think that played out. she became a national star, but a loser at the end of the day. it didn't work. i think the reason why it is so close, is we can't forget she was a tv personality in the state of arizona. so if you are paying close attention to the race, maybe when it's off mueller name and voted for her. not undermined the fact that, you know, there's still a lot of people are country correlation deniers. but it didn't work, she tried to be a donald trump two point oh and i think this country just over. it >> welcome back, this we have more breaking news actually in arizona, as well. cnn projects republican, david striker has been reelected in a district that joe biden narrowly carried in 2020. so i could was first elected in the tea party wave back in 2010. but wait, there is more. we also get a projection, right
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now. we have the republican businessman, branded williams. having one hand open seat in new york. by the way, biden won that district by seven points as well. so we've got a lot to unpack here. stick around everyone, we got more to come and of our breaking news. but i want to get you guys, and talk more about this. because here's the thing. as we are talking about all these races. as we try to unpack and forgot what it all means in the long run. election denialism is on the ballot. it really was. the idea of the president of the united states talking about democracy, even on the world stage. having a little bit of a spring in a step. a power viewed internationally on these issues. but i would repeat, these are not races that were decided on election night. for many of these racist, those were talk about oftentimes, some of them were of course but why is it that they were this close? >> it's a divided country, period. it's polarized, it's divided. the democrats have the dobbs
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decision. they have the abortion decision going for them. and then the question would be asking is, this issue set. it was a very republican issue set. when you talk about immigration, we talk about crime, we talk about inflation. why did republicans win by larger margins? you hadn't talk the president. all that put together, people are saying before the election, even some polls show this is going to be a perfect storm. for republicans. it was gonna be this big red wave. why did that not happen? i think one of the reasons is, the candidates mattered. in this election. i mean, which mcconnell is now famous for saying candidate quality matters. well it did matter. people paid attention to their candidates. >> but he'll be attacked, that lee. you already know -- that federal coddle be viewed as one of the people to actually point fingers at. senator josh hawley also weighed in on this. he's really smiling what did
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have to say about these issues. but here is his comment about the republicans that missouri. >> i think this election was a funeral for the republican party as we know. what the republican party, as we have noted, is that. and voters have made that clear. need to be think by what the future is. like a lot of president trump did. i think we got a lot to talk about their. but we need to have a conversation about our depictions as a party. clearly, this parties would have to actually be different. we're not gonna be a majority party in this country. >> think about what that means. the republican party is dead. if election deniers loose. is the contacts are supposed to be listen? i thought that wasn't who the republican party said they were. >> the republican parties that, i look at the camera this pumping the 16 riders. that is a big part of the problem. the party needs to get back to a center-right movement. in needs to moderate on some issues, like abortion. can we say that?
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i've said that for years. getting these positions. these absolutes positions that are alienating large swath of the country as well as large swaths of the republican party. maybe the party is that, but not for the reason he thinks. again, he's frankly part of the problem. this very rigid, and tolerant wing of the party. we have become much more socially sensible, and tolerant. if we hope to go on the free market. reasonable regulation. these constructive on the address stage. it's not just nativism, soggy populism, this isolation, this protectionism. that's a losing agenda. >> i also want to say though there is a whole new part of the electorate that has been engaged in a way that we haven't seen before. young people are voting and historical numbers. my generation, millennials, are voting at higher numbers. people of color are voting at greater numbers. and so, i think it's a good thing for democracy. the reality is it seems like
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one party is speaking to them more than another party. i also think what happened the cycle is that we kept getting polls that said, folks philippe the country was going in the wrong direction. i think we were talking about two different directions. some people over at that as though the country was going in the wrong direction, economically. i was right at the people -- i'm so sick of the last two years. of hate and insurrection, and polarization. i don't have a conversation with people anymore. are being afraid that you're gonna cantin-arku them. people are tired of that. school board meetings, people being violent because they want to ban books. i think that was the piece that folks miss in this election. that we are taking some of the -- going a bit too far. >> we are going to be watching the republican party on politicians like josh hawley, reinvent themselves. and it's going to be a process that is going to be very
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interesting to watch. because these are people who have to january six, were very critical of donald trump, they went back in the fold. because i thought donald trump was really powerful. and they couldn't live without him. now, they're trying to find out if they can even live with him. in any way, shape, or form. we are going to be reinventing themselves, and it is going to be very obvious. >> the thing about the american public the. i wonder if the american people remember the last iteration. north to reinvent oneself one has to count on a kind of electoral amnesia. and i'm just not convinced that it's even there at this point. but before we go to break or we have these two new projections come in just moments ago. here to cnn and arizona republican, david striker, has been reelected in the district narrowly carried in 2020. he was not the first elected in the tea party wave but he was a locked in the parlay back in 2010. we have another push from cnn.
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where businessmen branded williams has won an open seat in central new york. biden won that district by seven. we'll be right back. vo: the next time you fill up the tank, remember why it costs so much. because the biggest oil companies decided they need to profit even more. even as americans struggle to ey makpay the bills.ts... call it price gouging. callt greed. call it enough already. with president biden's landmark bill, we are producing more clean energy than ever before. energy that's made in america
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here we are.
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democrats find the odds do not hold on to the senate. with votes to be counted. the gop will win only a slim majority in the house. if projection told. what does this mean for president biden as he navigates the next, well, two years of his presidency? what is next for the gop after what can only be described as a poor showing. back with me, now gloria ford, ashley allison, and charlie dent. look, we can all confirm that the red wave did not materialize. red ripple, do not. i don't know what gradually materialized here. by all accounts, from senator ted cruz, josh hawley, and beyond. that a lot went very wrong for the republicans here. i want to just be clear about how election denialism played. look at this graph here about how the key election deniers actually fared in this election. let me just paint a picture of what's going on. all across the board.
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secretary of state, lieutenant governor, he had kari lake there as well. i mean, the blame game is now here. but that graph the really shows you where things are. the question really is why? who was listening the most? was it the democrat voters who are coming back all of a sudden. one top by ashley allison. is it the independent voters who came in? who were the really big players here. what do you guys think? >> independents. >> when you would say it. and he would outside. look at this about the independent and the large and by which they're able to be successful. look at that. this is the margin with independent voters. for the exit polls. that is a very strong showing in terms of how to make the party tend to feel a bit bigger. i set you up, let you knock it down. >> no, it is the independents. in 2010, 2014. or public inside wavier elections.
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they won independence by very significant margins. this time, it appears they lost. well those big numbers, but they lost by few points. so, in a year like this. they should be winning the independent by significant margin, they didn't. at the end of the day, this isn't what you are lot of voters went in and said one party is too far left. the other is too far out. and they went a little bit far-left in far out. especially the independents. they just couldn't stomach some of these candidates. who are just so far out of the mainstream. >> independents of new moderates? that we are saying? >> they may be moderate, yeah. this time, they were. but i think that, look, independent voters took a look at the people that they were presented with. they thought, you know what. i can't do that. what we saw this time, which was different, was to get something. people were differentiating and saying, you know what? i may like josh shapiro, for
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example. but i didn't like oz or, but the new hampshire. new hampshire was a big one. i think that voters are saying to themselves, look. which is about for these candidates. which is but my target. i need to do that. we don't see that a lot in this country. because some of these candidates didn't have the qualities -- didn't have the qualities that they -- >> unite of talked about this in the past about georgia, for example. what happens in the new election coming up in the somber. because, look at the stretch, the idea, the numbers, the people turned out bad for kemp. compared to walker. clearly, there is not a pure alignment of interest there. now, with him not being on the ballot. come december. that ticket slid that we speak up will not make a difference. i know is not the favorite
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child here in terms of the attention of ottoman arizona. but it really does highlight the independent notion. >> i agree that independence were important. but young people did something from this election stop those unexpected, and that was turnout. i would both of those you just get over the finish line. i think of people don't stop to some of these races maybe it doesn't pan out to be especially like a nevada where cortez masto pulls it out. so i do think it isn't and, not under. and the coalition building. i think about and like how you fill the puzzle. in terms of georgia, no may not be the thing that's going to decide the senate. but if you think of the long game, you want to put a lot of investment into georgia. because you don't want to forget about in 2024. it is really hard to totally deplete your infrastructure. and then start from scratch until the backup. you have to turn out independents, have to turn out
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young people, black voters for sure. latino -- that was actually sealed the deal 2020. i do think camp not being at the top of the ticket does hurt herschel walker, for sure. >> if you're herschel walker now, who do you embrace? camp, or trump? he should be embracing camp. >> templeton brace him. >> he needs to be aligned. if trump were to shop in georgia, again? and cause problems? >> kemp and trump are like oil and water. i would choose the winner. camp, not the loser, trump. >> they don't have a choice to. there's no way to stop donald trump when he wants to go to georgia. i just get back to tick explaining? the best example is sununu in new hampshire. who won by by lots. and then mikey hassan, applying for the senate against on bolton. and i've been through a lot of polls that showed that it's going to be really close.
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because sununu was at the top of the ticket, and it's going to bring both of them along. that didn't happen. >> think about a lot of divisive politics. and a divided country. but it seems like the ticket splitting, and the idea of saying maybe the idea that people are not going to always have the assumption come true. that here's why, here's who i will vote for. it might be a good thing for democracy. but we will soon see. did you know there's only been two black american governors speaking about the different demographic groups that are coming out and turning out for elections? there's only been to african american governors in the united states, history. as you look at maryland's governor elect, who's about to be the third. his name is westmore he is up next. also, later, michelle obama speaking out about how deeply hurt she felt when donald trump won the presidential election in 2016. this is from her new book, the light we carry.
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>> it shook me, profoundly, they hear the man who replaced my husband's president, openly, and unapologetically using ethnic slurs, making selfishness and hate somehow acceptable. refusing to condemn white supremacists or to support people demonstrating for racial justice.
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xfinity customers, on us. so you get more of the speed you need for day and night streaming. more speed you need when you're work from homeing. and more speed you need as your family keeps growing. check in on your current speed through the xfinity app today. the midterms are making history. -- the fading republican election denier, than. ought to become the first black governor of the state of
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maryland. just a third black american to be elected governor in the entire history of our country. maryland governor elect westmore joins me now. welcome to the program governor elect, westmore. there we called it was governor more. but how are you feeling? it's been a whirlwind. >> it's been a whirlwind feeling so good. the people, they give us the very creative and we end up winning the largest margin and maryland governors history. and the past 40 years. and that was because we won democrats. we won independents. we won a good chunk of republicans. and there's a mandate and unified vision. and we do the right bold, right go fast, forward to get it done together. that's what's really exciting. >> you know, your predecessor, larry hogan was thinking about that victory. the idea of just the amount of margin, and how maryland is a state that has had republican governors, democratic governors as well. listen to what he said, i want
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to direct on the other side. >> this should've been a huge red wave. should've been one of the biggest red waves we've ever had. because president biden approval rating was so low, when the pillow is historically. more than 70% people thought the country was going in the wrong direction. and yet, we still did perform. but i think common sense conservatives that focused on talking about issues people care about the economy and crime education, they did win. but people who try to re-litigate the 2020 election focused on conspiracy theories and talked about things the voters don't care about. they were all almost inversely rejected. and i think it's basically a third election wrote that donald trump has cost us the race. with two strikes are out. >> the, should a, would. as it comes through. he actually did but i wanna fight on this. because of people i want to focus on the race as of trump's name was on the ballot? and if it was the --
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that they just underperformed. as opposed to giving you the full two credit that maybe you are very appealing to voters. provide every sense. why do you think your message was so resonating with communities? >> i think candidates to matter. i think you are an effort to go over the state. people are saying you guys are everywhere, going a lot of areas, people say you're in a lot of places. there's not a lot of democrats. and the plan of being the governor to. we talk about we've known behind agenda. which is believe. had i did not behind agenda. which means we're gonna focus on creating pathways for work, and wages, and while. make sure we can have an education system teacher children are not to be in place but how to be employers. make sure we can focus on job retraining. the people should be getting paid a fair wage for the work they're doing. saw people who work in jobs, in some cases, multiple jobs. and simple departing.
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light focusing well -- those weren't democratic issues. those republican issues. those are the maryland people continue to tell us for important. and i tell them policy i can open book test. the voters are gonna give you the answers, we have to listen, and if they can understand to try to tell you. then put together platforms in order to address the issues that they're facing. >> speaking of test. it means that you pass so many. very present resume, people are screaming your prices, they're already bypassing the gubernatorial race thinking about the future. you've been very focused on the hair. now so oftentimes, governors, in particular. as that is or traditional past the presidency. we'll sort of think of it as a notch out about the say, you know, here's a stop over. a layover. you've been very intentional about saying, this is what you wanted to do. this is where you want to be. and it's a climate, frankly, you're coming off election
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denialism. we're coming off a lot of divisive rhetoric. there's a narrative that are being re-told across a variety of key figures. why did you want to enter politics at the time you are right now? many could say, you know what, better someplace else. you want to serve. why? >> i've been a public servant for my whole life. i just haven't been politician. but every working on these issues. these issues of early childhood support, mental health, chrome justice reform, economic pathology. their member, iran's the largest probably fighting organizations the country. >> robinhood? that's exactly right. >> we work on the issue of the child tax credit. -- and then we cut the child poverty rate and a half. remember work on these issues, and not getting the state to make an adjustment. and those hoping that they would make. just speaking to and my colleagues. our china can adjustment to the end of the day speech.
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he said we work with six months to had aligned in the speech. but what if you can read the whole speech. that is a point. everything in our life the policy situation. the air we breathe, the water we drink, the way your policed, the transportation assets you have, or don't have. the homes we've been for the homes and your children attend. those are positive agents. in order this be maryland decade, and i'm convinced this could be marilyn's decade. it means we got to take our policy seriously, and that means we need to take care that our policies are meeting people where they are. i know that we have a government is going to support individuals and give them a chance to grow and thrive. >> you know what, the rain works ahead of you. as you know you're gonna be the governor elect. not could be easy, hill to climb any stretch of the imagination. they are doing it with the historical marker. and you are the first black
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governor in the state of maryland. you're joining a very exclusive club, even black men and women. the idea of thinking about blue leadership position in general. the idea of making history. as opposed to putting in the rearview mirror things that you want to see in the past. what do you think will be your guiding light? >> i think about for the state of maryland. we have the state of harry tubman. thurgood marshall. and frederick douglass and i don't i take that oath and become not just the 63rd governor the state, but the first black governor. i know the shoulders denim standing on. and help our people had to work to include people in my own family. where -- inside this country. and he was just a toddler. the ku klux klan rent my family out of this country. and they want to jamaica. most my family always pledge
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today would never come back to this country, most a.. but my grandfather did. eventually, he worked in hbcu. he became a minister, like his father. this is a man who passed away when he was 87 years old. but a deep to make an accent. and was maybe the most patriotic american i've ever met. ida falls talked him about being the first because with the first black mr., and the history of the church. and it was tell me, i'm humbled but the fact of the first, that wasn't the assignment. and that is the approach i very much take this moment. where i'm humbled by the fact that the state maryland has given me the honor of being the first black government history of our state, but i also know, that is not the assignment. >> america to make him, and i'll be understand the assignment, it's nice to see you, very wonderful to see represent the way you know you will, provided people.
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and of course for all those in power, and all those are perilous. good luck to you. thank you so much. coming up next, shocking news. jay leno has been seriously burned and the gasoline fire. what happens and how he's recovering when we come back.
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did you see my friend over there? we're talking. you should be doing something else. you take the lead on this. you're less intimidating. you don't find me intimidating? no. it's a height thing. hi. -hi. we're from the new york times, i believe you use to worked for harvey wienstein. i can't believe you found me. i've been waiting for this for 25 years. we have decades of accusations of assault. wienstein's on his way here. let him in... this is all gonna come out. [ coughing/sneezing ] [ door knocking ] dude, you coming? because the only thing dripping should be your style! plop plop fizz fizz, with alka-seltzer plus cold & flu relief. also try for fizzy fast cough relief!
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jayland was in the hospital tonight recovering from serious burns to his face and his hands. the comedian, was an edward car collector was in his garage on saturday when he was injured in a gasoline accident. when you bring about cnn media have alleges, sara fischer, and direct of the john hobbs can burn center. dr. mark fischer. i mean this horrible news to hear about what's going on. think about. because he's been injured. >> i'm hearing that he's okay. he said that in a statement to
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variety he expects to be up on the street and want to do. weeks starts a good sign. but these are serious injuries to his face into his hands. the incident happened in his own garage. we know jay lana loves cars. he is a short cnbc re-talks about it. >> to think about the idea of only a week on your feet. amid burns can be excruciating, but very serious. we have all the information now, but how extensive it might be. but we do know hosting overnight in the hospital. some of you can tell us about the way these are treated the implication that's very serious. or is it routine to stay overnight? >> not almost overnight. depends on the danger is. we do have to hope for him that these are superficial and will go quickly. when they are superficial, they tend to heal within a couple of weeks. but with perhaps no scarring. but if it's the person but more serious, pouring surgery. >> i'm in gasoline as the incendiary notion here. that could be a very serious and deep wound, could it not?
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>> it really could. we take care of lots of patients just like that at hopkins. that sometimes have to replace tissue. sometimes you can lose hope portions of the face. >> that's a skin grafting is welcoming to that? >> they can be skin grafting but sometimes you do so much of the pace they really have to do things or creative and expensive to try to replace the tissue itself. >> do we know if that is a very expensive injuring anyway? ours ice, for example, okay? >> you have any information right now. about part space, or which part of his hands. but the fact is able to provide a statement, i think without that he's in pretty good shape. i don't expect him to be in the hospital for a long time. he's been in the bra center, very slow burn center very summit doctor fish over here. in california. >> just think about that. the idea of the road ahead for recovery. possibly a week or so on his feet. but how common are injuries like this. he is known, as you mentioned sarah, for his expensive car collection. he's an aficionados say the least. but the idea from the older car stays work on the internet may have come from a gasoline fire.
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i mean, how common is something like this to happen? >> remarkably common. we have about 1000 bucks admissions a year in maryland for the state. i myself will come patients like this every day. >> what is common? that people have in the ag to the face and hands, or it's the body, is it happening again stations? or inside -- was tapping normally. >> some more common things that we work on cars. but also just setting leaves on fire. we've seen that pretty often. and then, sadly, that circumstances at home with working with stops in the like. you can have explosions. it's remarkably common. >> we're hearing that from the variety statement that he made that he might be okay. we look for to hearing more. thanks for joining us this evening. shocking to fix how common really is. also shocking, how common evil can violence can be in this country.
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the committee of charlottesville is in mourning tonight. people are counting the university's campus after a shooting there claimed the lives of three students. and wounded two others. the victims, laval davis juniors, devin chandler, and the shaun perry. they all current members of the university's football team. and they're on a bus returning from a class trip to right here in washington d.c., when the attack took place. just look at these three young men. this devastated think about. this one on the screen if the
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suspect. christopher darnell jones junior, who was in police custody tonight. he's a constant at an ex football player. he now faces three charges of second-degree murder, and three counts of using a handgun id condition of a felony. so i'm not cnn chief law enforcement and intelligence analysts, john miller. john, just looking at the picture of those three young men, who have been killed. it is just so unbelievably tragic and sad. just really is to think about. as a mother, to think what you center gives a school and going on a bus to field trip and they could see a plague here at washington d.c.. the next phone call, the parents received, is of the children having been killed. by another student. john, tell me what you heard about this. but what has surprised you about this? but >> well, when i was with the fbi, the virginia tech shooting happened.
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that was 33 people killed. numerous others shot and injured. that wasn't thousand seven. and mary ellen o'toole. one of our top fbi profiler's and secret service got to get a look at the school shootings. and what they came up with us and 85, to 95% of these cases, laura. that's what they cause leakage. the person is giving hints, is telling others that something is about to happen. so in the first things we look for in a case like this is that. it is very interesting, the police press conference, but they actually came forward without being asked and volunteered that this person had been on the threat assessment radar at the school prior to the shooting. states want to be a lot of questions about how that was done, and what was done, and with the limits are. >> think about what would that entail. if somebody had that been evolution of how the star will
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be, handle how threat assessment may be waiting considered on school campus. what would that look like? >> really interesting question, laura. what that would look like his chief long who's ahead of that infrastructure, to mongols the chief of police at the university. at murkowski, like she runs threat assessment team. but there is a medical component. and the dean of students compound it. and this as the cases. here's the problems about the threat assessment business limits of it. he largely told the student he had a gun. that student passed on to school. the school passed sponsor threat assessment team. that assessment the interview the person who reported in said, we mentioned he had a gun. we didn't say what to do a thing with it. so there was no threat attached to it. they interviewed his roommate. who said i've been in the same room with him hurt school, never saw gun. he hasn't shown it done or
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brandish a gun. presumably, and we don't know this, and we will. you can close a case like that out and a properly without interviewing the subject. mr. jones. about to have a gun, did make a statement. but the point is there's not much you can do on that. -- we even have the buffalo shooting the supermarket by a racist white supremacists. where the more than a teenager. he made threatening statements. he was put into 72 hours observation, given a prescription, and sent home. because it wasn't johnny, think i made it up. it obviously turned out not to be true. this is a difficult field. >> as you describe it. thinking about the hook. what needs to happen in order to move along. we hear so often talk mass shootings, talk about school shootings. talk about what where the red
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flags. what were the signs, what could've been done differently to prevent. but he goes back to -- you and i both know the salon for sprinted prosecution. what you would need in order to do something more. which is not a satisfying response by anti hosted imaginations night for these families who are undoubtedly grieving an entire campus as well. you are right to point out the initial transparency that came from this press conference, i do wonder, john miller. it will continue. thank you so much for joining us this evening. >> thank you laura. >> again, just think about those two young men. it is just heartbreaking. not good for the party. says one republican. still asked another? not entitled to it says one more. and those are some of the comments from republicans on capitol hill about an impending trump 2024 announcement. stay with us. a life-changing accident.
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look, election night is carrying on with cnn calling two more house races in just the past hour. the winds bring the gop to 214 seats at just four away from getting control of the house at 218. we are checking tonight, the democrat katie hobbs will win arizona's governor raised, defeating republican candidate kari lake. a trump ally who has been pushing election lies and saying she would not certify joe biden's win in arizona. let's bring in our panel right now, we have cnn critical analyst alex burns, and former rnc communications director doug hines. ashley allison is back with us as well. look at, there is a lot happening right now. kari lake is responding already stating that she has been called as the one who did not win this particular race. and that is expected that sh

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