tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN November 16, 2022 1:00am-2:00am PST
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usiness mobile. all from the company that powers more businesses than any other provider. get started with fast speeds and advanced security for $49.99 a month for 12 months. plus ask how to get up to a $750 prepaid card with a qualifying bundle. hello and a warm welcome to our viewers joining us in the united states and all around the world. i'm bianca nobilo. >> i'm max foster. just ahead on "cnn newsroom" --
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>> to make the world great and glorious again, i am announcing my candidacy for the presidency of the united states. >> i have a feeling that the mid-term is depressing him. >> this is the announcement that absolutely no one in the republican party wants right now. liftoff of artemis 1. we rise together. back to the moon and beyond. >> in the effort to return humans to the moon. >> they are pointing the finger of blame to a certain extent directly at moscow. >> we have been crystal clear we will defend every inch of nato territory. >> announcer: live from loren done this is "cnn newsroom" with max foster and bianca nobilo. we are tracking 2 major
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stories this hour. first, donald trump has officially entered the 2024 race for the white house. the former president says crime and inflation have pushed the u.s. towards ruin under joe biden and the country is a laughing stalk on the world stage. if he wins president trump would be the first u.s. president to be elected to nonconsecutive terms since grover cleveland. >> the decline of america is being forced upon us by biden and the radical left lunatics running our government right into the grouped. this decline is not a fate we must accept. when given the choice boldly, clearly, directly i believe the american people will overwhelmingly reject the left's platform of national ruin and they will embrace our platform of national greatness and glory to eric m. >> president joe biden who is at the g20 summit tweeted donald
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trump failed america. we're following developments after a missile hit poland and killed two people. >> polish officials said the missile was russian made. >> matthew chance was on the scene earlier and mass more on the investigation. >> reporter: it's a one-street tang and that street has been sealed off by the polish authorities preventing us from getting to the scene because they've got specialists on the ground there literally trying to piece together the fragments of the ordinance to try to work out where it's from and who fired it. the polish authorities have come out and said it's a russian-made missile but of course it doesn't necessarily mean it was fired by russia. >> poland may invoke nato's article 4 which would trigger talks with the alliance's decision-making body. in the coming hours nato will hold an emergency meeting in
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brussels. >> they held an emergency meeting in indonesia and they promised poland their full support. >> our correspondents are tracking developments around the world. welcome to all of you. kevin, first of all with you, g leaders holding a midnight session to discuss this crisis. >> reporter: yeah, that's right. the urgent matter before them was trying to determine where this missile was fired from and the implications are so high because poland is a member of nato and the article 5 treaty from nato would apply to poland. an attack against one is an attack against all and that is the reason that these leaders warrant to be absolutely certain where this missile came from before they come out and make any statements. you did hear president biden emerge from that meeting very cautious in his remarks.
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he said that it was unlikely that this missile originated in russia but he couched his remarks. he wanted to be definitive. he wanted to see all of the information first. we know the two countries using russian-made missiles in this war are russia and ukraine. the president certainly wants to keep his words to himself before he knows for sure what happens. what american officials are saying is they can track this fairly well using their intelligence capabilities. they would know the trajectory of this missile but before they have that solid they don't want to reveal what they know beforehand because of the consequences and the implications. president biden did board air force 1. it's a 24-hour flight back to washington and he will be joined on the plane by his senior most national security aides. earlier today he spoke with the
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polish president. he also spoke with the nato secretary general. they are meeting in brussels today to discuss the article 4 treaty. you do hear a lot about article 5. article 4 is the treaty of mutual conference discussing a path forward, discussing what countries know, what countries don't know and certainly president biden will want to be in very close touch with his representatives on the ground there, but this is a very high stakes situation around there's no question president biden will want this resolved fairly quickly so this isn't sort of hanging over -- the discussion isn't hanging over the conference. he will be back in washington later this week and we will hear more from him at some point on that. >> thank you, kevin. let's go next to melissa bell in brussels where the nato hq is there. we understand a nato plane had tracked this missile. do you know what information that nato has, whether or not
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they're continuing to coordinate with allies and investigate this further? and when can we expect to know any more concrete details? i understand the secretary general may be making a press conference later today. >> reporter: that's right, bianca. a meeting has gotten underway. they're looking at all the intelligence of all of the nato alliance members. as you say, a nato official has confirmed to cnn that a nato aircraft was able to track that missile as it landed. that intelligence has been fed back to nato headquarters. it's part of what nato alliance members are looking at. as kevin was saying, it comes in the context where already poland has raised its level of military preparedness and suggested it could invoke article 4. we will know more about whether or not it has invoked and started that consultation
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process, not the first time it's been invoked by nato countries. seven times since nato was created in 1949. it is the first step that means nato members gather around their country to consult with it on what they need to do next. it will be a measure to see how seriously nato takes this. it will be decided whether or not that is necessary. we should know more once that meeting is finished. jan stoltenberg is expected to speak mid-day in brussels. >> what channels exist for deconfliction between russia and nato? >> reporter: very little, bianca, because of the nature of rhetoric and the nearly nine months of this war that have unfolded. what we've seen in the course of the last four hours are denials on the part of russia.
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they're saying it's provocation which is exactly what you would expect to hear. the nato alliance members very aware of that rhetoric, very aware, of course, how quickly rhetoric can be inflamed and passions can be ignited. given all the implications of invoking article 4 and article 5, given the seriousness of what that would represent, of course they're going to be taking very measured language and considering very carefully what that is. you'll see a halfway house and the member states that are close to the border. the need for a no fly zone to try to prevent this incident from ever sort of happening again. bianca? >> nina, there was a very quick response from moscow. they described this missile landing as a deliberate provocation. what do you think they meant by that? >> reporter: that came from the russian ambassador to the united nations. that's going to be a security
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council meeting taking place today after that nato meeting which is set to wrap up in a few hours' time that melissa was talking about. russia bound to bring this to the floor. it will dominate the meeting from all sides. the ambassador from russia to the united nations and capitalizing on joe biden's earlier remarks of the g20 saying early intelligence saying it might have ornl nated in ukraine, not russia. russia saying this was a deliberate attempt, quote, unquote, to cause a military clash. this incident is called something that proved one thing, wagging a hybrid war against russia means that the west moves closer and closer to a world war. that's really worrying talk. of course, you can imagine it's
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probably going to be discussed around the table as we speak that's taking place in brussels right now. what they're going to evaluate as melissa said, one, this might be a russian missile. that as we've heard is probably the less plausible explanation. one, ukraine may have fired one of its own missiles to try to knock a russian missile off course or this could be a ukrainian missile that ended up in nato territory. the confusion arises because both russia and ukraine, pro soviet states, use similar s-300 defense and missile systems because they're made in this part of the world. >> ivan, to you in bali. we've had the communique released from the g20 countries.
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it can be like reading tea leaves. in terms of what was said in terms of the conflict and russia's invasion of ukraine, what struck you? >> reporter: right. well, first, the ukraine war is front and center not only in the enormous 1100 plus page declaration that the g20 published in the last couple of hours but also at the actual meetings when the ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy was granted space to address the assembled leaders and ukraine isn't a member of the g20. this as the russian president, vladimir putin, was a no show and he sent his foreign minister here instead. in this enormous document it's the third article in it talking -- calling it the ukraine war and that's important because another g20 member, china, avoids calling it a war referring to it as frequently a crisis instead of a war that has
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killed so many people and is destroying so much of ukraine. the declaration goes on to say, quote, most members strongly condemned the war in ukraine and stressed it is causing immense human suffering and exacerbating existing fragilities in the global economy. while president biden led a camp of u.s. allies that have been very outspoken criticizing russia's conduct of this invasion and war, you have other countries that are more neutral, indonesia, india, china a russian ally, yet the indonesian president came out again today saying, stop this war. back to you. >> ivan, kevin, melissa, and nina, thank you all so much. we're barley a week beyond the u.s. mid-term elections and already one candidate has his sights set on 2024. it is donald trump, of course,
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facing a series of state and federal investigations. but he is determined to return to the white house has kristin holmes reports. >> reporter: tuesday night former president donald trump launching his third presidential bid despite the warnings of many top advisers and aides that said he didn't have the momentum coming out of the mid-terms. concern he would overshadow the georgia senate runoff and cause republican herschel walker. it was low energy. he seemed to stay mostly on message. it was likely 30 minutes. it was much longer. take a listen to some of what he had to say. >> in order to make america great and fwlor yous again, i am tonight announcing my candidacy for president of the united states. >> reporter: now this is historic for a multitude of reasons. not only because there has been
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one person to successfully run for a non-consecutive term and win but also given the nature of donald trump. this is a man who is facing several federal investigations, embroiled in multiple legal battles. additionally, he sought to overturn the 2020 election. still doesn't recognize that he lost that legitimate election to joe biden and this is entering the 2024 race as a potential rematch for him against current president biden. cnn, palm beach, florida. many republicans wanted trump to wait before announcing his third white house bid. maggie higman says the former president thinks his run will help from the federal
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investigations. >> he believes this will provide him some armor. the justice department has made it clear that's not a decision they're considering. you can't divorce all of this from the politics with how trump will use it and weaponize it. >> it surprised me given the amount of time he's been thinking about this, that this was the best product he could put out. i listened to him in the campaign in pennsylvania. he was full of energy. he was teasing the fact that he was going to announce. you could sense that he wanted to do it. where was that person tonight? something has happened. i have a feeling just watching him that the mid-term is depressing him tremendously. >> if he wins in 2024, now he is the candidate. can he be beaten head to head with ron desantis and tim scott? sure.
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but it won't be a head-to-head race. he'll get the 35% that support him. under the winner take all, he'll be the nominee. that means the 2024 race is not about joe biden or whatever person is on the ticket. it will be about donald trump and no other events, no one voted for joe biden. everybody voted for or against donald trump. it was a referendum on him. that's what we're hurtling towards. still ahead, we'll take a closer look at some of the claims trump made in his special announcement and see how they square up with the reality. 3, 2, 1. boosters ignition! liftoff of artemis 1. we rise together back to the moon and beyond. >> after a nail-biting set of
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glitches, artemis 1 blasted off for the 26 day mission to the moon. there was a hydrogen fuel leak shortly. >> it was a third attempt to launch the rocket. the most powerful one ever built. the first phase is an unmanned test flight and the ultimate goal is to return astronauts to the moon and some day send humans to mars. >> we're joined by kristin fisher who is at the kennedy space center. kristin, the most joyful thing is your reaction which has been playing on the air. tell us what it was like and remind viewers about the significance of this mission. >> reporter: i just could not believe that it was finally launching after all of these delays that have blogged this rocket. bianca and max, the other thing that struck me, we knew we were going to be able to not just see and hear but really feel this rocket when it took off. the most powerful rocket ever
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built that's in operation today. what i was not anticipating was how this rocket literally turned the entire sky from horizon to horizon, from night to day in just seconds. it was like a super accelerated sunrise and then this rocket performed just beautifully and is now on its way to the moon as we speak. let me just walk you through some of the nail biting. the first and second launch had technical glitches, hydrogen leak, faulty sensor. then they rolled back from hurricane ian. came back, hit by hurricane nicole and five days later a third launch attempt. two issues, another hydrogen leak only this time all they needed to do was fix it, sounds quite simple but it's too you willy not, bianca and max, they had to tighten some nuts and bolts but to do that they had to
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send in the red team, a team of very highly skilled technicians to go do this because they're going into a blast zone, i mean, a fully fueled rocket is essentially look a big bomb. they had to go there and tighten these nuts and bolts. they were able to make that fix and when nasa announced the rocket was ready to fly, we got another error from the u.s. space force which operates this range saying there was a problem with, get this, an ethernet connector. just imagine if it had been an ether net connector that stopped this rocket from lifting off. they were able to fix it in the last minute, max and bianca. the it's headed to the moon and should be there in five or six days. it will come back to earth and splash down into november. >> thank you very much. >> setting up camp on the moon. >> i am no astronaut but you
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don't want to go into space with a loose bolt. the excitement was understandable. this was her super bowl. a week after the u.s. mid-term elections lawmakers return to capitol hill to talk about what happened last week and who will lead congress. plus, his presidential announcement was vintage trump. build the wall, drain the swamp, just tell the truth. winter has come early for those in the u.s. ped dral javaheri will update us on the snow that is causing problems across the country. >> that's right. up to 20 inches in the midwest. winter weather alert spanning across 15 states. snowfall alerts could exceed up to over a foot in the coming days. we'll break it down in a few moments.
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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. despite the outcome in the senate, we cannot lose hope and we must all work very hard for a gentleman and a great person named herschel walker, a
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fabulous human being who loves our country and will be a great united states senator. herschel walker, get out and vote for herschel and he deserves it. >> that as you recognize was donald trump endorsing republican herschel walker in the upcoming runoff elections. georgians head back to the polls in three weeks. raphael warnock is suing the state of georgia to allow for another day of early voting. >> they filed a lawsuit challenging the move to prohibit early voting on the saturday after thanksgiving. it is taking action to prevent voters from early voting. did you keep up with that? >> i tried. >> republican ken calvert will
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win against will ronan. this is a republican hold. >> jim kosta will win the california 21st district defeating republican michael mayer. this is a democratic hold. this gives republicans a total of 217 seats in the house. that means they need just one more to take control of the chamber. >> these developments come as congress is back on capitol hill for the first time since the mid-terms. republicans are haggling over who will lead the party. in the wake of last week's disappointing election results some prominent republicans are facing challenging positions. >> reporter: after the first time since mitch mcconnell has been the republican leader, he is facing a challenge from within. this after senator rick scott, florida republican, someone who has been battling with mcconnell's allies for months over the handling of the
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policies plans to challenge him at a closed door meeting. scott is the head of the national republican senatorial committee. mitch mcconnell, the republican leader, someone who has an outside group that spent hundreds of millions of dollars in key senate races in order to try to get back the senate majority. the fact that they failed to get back the majority has led to finger pointing, going behind closed doors for more than three hours on tuesday as they criticized each other and questioned how their party should move ahead in the aftermath of tuesday's debacle. he made it clear he's locked down the votes. rick scott's candidacy is a protest vote over mcconnell himself. when i asked one of scott's allies, scott hawley, he a land himself with rick scott and suggested the republican leader
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could not get them back to the majority. >> yes. >> reporter: what's the problem of having mcconnell as a leader for another two years? >> if you like the election results, there is no problem. if you want to be a majority party, what we're doing hasn't been working. if you look at independent voters, we gave them nothing. no alternative. they didn't want to have an agenda. >> reporter: you don't think he could get you back to a majority? >> no. >> reporter: hawley's views are in the minority. expect mcconnell to be re-elected. this will make him the longest serving senate leader. republicans dealing with their own leadership challenges. kevin mccarthy was nominated to be the next speaker of the house. he is far short to be the next
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speaker inn january. manu raju, cnn. manu, the calendar says fall. colder than usual temperatures sweeping the country with snow from the great lakes to the northeast. pedram is keeping an eye on all of this for us. hi, pedram. >> good morning, guys. lots of win try weather to tell you about. across the great lakes and on into the portions of the east. the elements are in place to produce a significant bounce including areas scattered about 15 states. could see a couple of feet of fresh snow in the coming days. a lot of this has to do with lake effect snow. we have quite a bit of warm air going across portions of the great lakes. with it of course get energy transfer that translates into snowfall on the eastern shores of the great lakes. this is why we're seeing significant forecasts that bring in as much as 18 to 24 inches. we have higher amounts as much as 24 inches.
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you'll notice portions of southwest michigan and interior areas tapping into quite a bit of snowfall in the coming several days. the cold air has been talk of the town. we have another shot going into this weekend and possibly early next week. if you think it gets cold now, 64 what you should be experiencing but in chicago you're 37. that's already plenty below the average of 48. troops down to 31 thursday, 26 come friday. it is the incredible surge of cold air that's going to get a lot of people's attention here where temps drop down to february-lake cold here by this weekend. 42 is considered normal. nowhere near that as we approach the weekend. we expect a rebound again staying below seasonal averages. the western u.s. dealing with a different pattern.
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the winds are compressing and sinking down into portions of southern california. as this happens, the santa ana winds pick up in intensity and we have some concerns here as wind gusts have been observed up to 90 miles an hour. >> watching closely. still ahead this hour, trump versus the truth. cnn's fact checkers take a look at some of the most outrageous claims in his announcement for the presidency last night. why the pope is taking a thoughtful approach to the missile strike in poland neuriva: think bigger. when we started selling my health products online our shipping process was painfully slow. then we found shipstation. now we're shipping out orders 5 times faster and we're saving a ton. go to shipstation.com /tv and get 2 months free.
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top stories. nato will hold a meeting today to discuss the missile that fell in poland on tuesday killing two people. it was a russian-made missile. unclear who fired it or for where. former u.s. president drumpd officially announced his candidacy. he took jabs at dome emocrats a biden. here's daniel dale with the fact-checking results. >> reporter: former president trump started his campaign for the presidency in 2024 just as he ended his presidency in 2021, with a whole lot of inaccuracy to be generous or dishonesty if you are less generous. trump said he completed the wall on the border with mexico. that's not even close to be true. there are 280 miles or 450 kilometers not completed when he
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left office. trump was complaining about the criminal investigation. he said obama did it too. that's not true. it was debunked too get revenues and such terrorists were downplayed. he made false claims even when the facts were in his favor. for example, u.s. officials have concluded that $7 billion worth of equipment was left behind. trump could have accurately complained about that. instead, he said it was $85 billion left behind. so exaggeration after exaggeration, false claim after false claim. daniel dale, cnn. >> we're going to be seeing a
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lot more of him. >> i'd say it's a safe bet. a florida judge has ordered michael flynn to testify before a special grand jury. they're demanding flynn testify next tuesday. he's one of a handful of witnesses to testify in a georgia election. the judge denied flynn's request to defer whilst he appeals. grand jury testimony is sealed. cassidy hutchinson, a former aide to the white house chief mark meadows, is scheduled to testify today. senator lindsey graham is slated to appear as a witness on thursday. u.s. president joe biden said it's unlikely a missile that landed in eastern pole
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lapped was fired from russia after consulting with authorities in geneva. the pentagon is being measured in its response to the incident. cnn's oren lieberman explains why. >> reporter: the pentagon is being very careful with what statements it makes about this missile that landed in poland killing two. the press secretary said they were looking at what the evidence says. they're urging caution and crucially who might have fired it and under what circumstances, whether this was intentional or an accident. the pentagon taking this very slowly as it gathers information. defense secretary lloyd austin spoke with his counterpart and then general mark millie spoke with his polish and ukrainian
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counterparts on tuesday evening. that's in addition to the other conversations with president biden and others as we will as the u.s. makes sure what happened not only with poland but nato in general. it's worst going back to the invasion of this. the pentagon is clearly able to track russian launches. the fact they haven't come out and said definitively whether this was a russian missile or ukrainian missile launched in air defense, that's a statement in itself. again, for example, perhaps ukrainian air defense missile launched in an attempt to launch a russian missile. we saw a barrage of those launched in ukraine with approximately 100 or more and we
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know they tried to shoot them down. the u.s. has offered and will send a team of experts to help investigate the missile launch, but until there is more information, until that investigation is complete, the pentagon being very careful what it says at this time. the pentagon not likely to get ahead of the white house and not likely to get ahead of poland and an explanation for how that missile landed in poland. oren lieberman, cnn, the pentagon. u.s. inflation is cooling a bit and that sparked a rally on wall street. we'll check the numbers just ahead of you.
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well, we fell in love through gaming. but now the internet lags and it throws the whole thing off. when did you first discover this lag? i signed us up for t-mobile home internet. ugh! but, we found other interests. i guess we have. [both] finch! let's go! oh yeah! it's not the same. what could you do to solve the problem? we could get xfinity? that's actually super adult of you to suggest. i can't wait to squad up. i love it when you talk nerdy to me. guy, guys, guys, we're still in session.
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because it was unconstitutional but it was paused in 2019. the ban had been in effect since july and the decision immediately makes the procedure illegal again until at least 20 weeks of pregnancy. spokesperson for georgia's republican governor said the state has filed a notice of appeal. the biden administration is requesting a stay on tuesday's court ruling blocking -- ruling blocking title 42, the controversial trump era pandemic restriction on the u.s./mexican border which allowed the military to expel a million migrants. they said it was arbitrary, capricious and in violation of the administrative procedures act. after president trump left the office the biden administration used it and expanded it. the stay they're requesting would last through december 21st. more charges for the gunman
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in the university of virginia shooter. >> prosecutors tell cnn are related to the two people injured in sunday's shooting. a school spokesperson said jones was on a bus with the victims as they were returning to a field trip to washington, d.c. >> three of the school's football players were killed when jones opened fire and the motive remains unclear. the mayor of jackson, mississippi, said they may need a new water treatment facility. this comes as they are poised to help fix the decades long problems with its water. >> people have lost trust in their government and so this will give transparency but also have a federal court in jackson's backyard oversee and call fair shots to rebuild not only the infrastructure but the trust that the community has lost. >> reporter: so this means you are not going anywhere as the
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epa administrator and the epa itself is going to be here to try to get things done? >> we're going to be here for the long haul. >> jackson's plant failed after flooding. more than 80% affected are african american which has prompted the epa to open a civil investigation. the latest u.s. retail figures are due today. we'll see how target is fairing as the retail giant reports its earnings.
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in a few hours. futures have been trending a little higher and you can see at the moment everything is looking up so we'll keep an eye on those for you. the markets could obviously move when we get a look at the latest consumer spending report. the october retail sales one is due out today. meanwhile, inflation at a wholesale level appears to be cooling. cnn's matt egan explains what this all means for you. >> reporter: wholesale prices rising 8% year over year down interest 8.4%. month over month rising half as much as expected. 8% wholesale inflation is not healthy or normal. this is the fourth straight month of cooling year over year. we had wholesale inflation at nearly 12% back in march.
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this is obviously much better than that. the this is the lowest level in 15 months. not surprisingly, food and energy prices, they do remain high. anyone who's been to a grocery store or gas station knows that. in some other areas, prices are actually declining. remember, these are wholesale prices. these are prices that we don't see ourselves at the store but the hope, of course, is that businesses do pass this easing price in pressure to consumers. the rate of premature birth is rising. the rates of babies born in the u.s. before their due date have risen over 10%.
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jaclyn howard has more. >> reporter: max and bianca, the pre-term birth rate here in the united states increased to 10.5% last year. and i asked the chief medical officer for march of dimes, dr. henderson, what can we take away from that number. her response? that number is unacceptable. have a listen. >> the main thing to take away is the fact, i think, there are too many babies being born too soon. one in ten. if you were to have ten babies in front of you and one of them having to face the complications that comes with prematurity, that's unacceptable and we need to do better. >> reporter: what she means is march of diemts is advocating for improved maternity care here in the u.s. there are state-by-state differences in the pre-term birth rates. vermont has the lowest rate at 8% and the states with the worst rates are mostly in the south with mississippi having the
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highest rate overall at 15%. now the reason why we're seeing these increases in pre-term births, dr. henderson says it appears to be related to how some women are giving birth at older ages. some have underlying medical conditions like diabetes and high blood pressure and also last year some women had covid-19 while giving birth and that can increase the risk for delivery pre-term. max and bianca, this is a global issue. the world health organization says pre-term birth complications are the leading term of death. they updated the guidelines. this happened just ahead of world prematurity day which is tomorrow, november 17th. max and bianca, back to you. more than 1 billion young people are at risk of hearing loss. people age 12 to 34 are likely
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to listen to music, movies and shows on the unsafe levels. >> it was tracked to the use of headphones and entertainment venues, concerts, bars and clubs. >> that's why i don't go to clubs and concerts because i can't hear afterwards? >> what? they can join the old people not being able to hear. taylor swift fans demanding answers after ticket master's website crashed. angry fans report the website appeared to crash or freeze during a purchase. pretty stressful when you've been waiting for that ticket to come out. >> everything is protected. >> in response to the demand ticket master shifted the start times of pre-sales for swift's other dates. it begins march 18th. >> is that something you're interested in? >> i would love to go to a concert, yes. >> because you're hip. now disney world in florida
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is increasing the ticket prices for the second time this year. starting on december 8th the price will depend on which of the four theme parks you visit as well as the day. the magic kingdom will be the most expensive. it's as much as $189. >> what? >> i just, you know, get my friends to dress up as disney characters. >> "early start" begins now. how? wake u up to a new you. with mucinex nightshift, it's not cold and flu u season. it's's always comeback season.
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until i found some information. i was able to find out more than just a name. and then you add it to the tree. i found ship manifests. birth certificate. wow. look at your dad. i love it so much to know where my father work, where he grew up? it's like you discover a new family member. it's the greatest gift. now on sale at ancestry.
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