tv CNN Tonight CNN January 6, 2023 12:00am-1:00am PST
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watching us here in the united states and all around the world. i'm paula newton. ahead right here on cnn newsroom plenty of action on the house floor, but still no one has been elected speaker. what concessions will kevin mccarthy now have to make to win the 12th ballot? vladimir putin is calling for a temporary ceasefire in ukraine, ahead, why many are skeptical of his proposal. and later more details about what's in prince harry's upcoming memoir "spare" including begging his father not to marry camilla. live from cnn center, this is cnn newsroom. >> the house of representatives will convene today at noon for a 12th vote to elect a new speaker or at least try to and get on with the business of governing. republican leader kevin mccarthy is making major concessions to conservative
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holdouts, but he hasn't swayed a single member of the so- called never kevins. the streak of 11 failed votes over the past three days is now the longest in 164 years. democrats say if the gop has this much trouble electing a speaker, they have no chance of governing. meantime mccarthy claims talks within his party are making progress and he says he's confident he'll eventually win. >> i'm not putting my timeline. i think we've got some progress. i think we've got a little movement. so we'll see. >> have you had to walk back the threats you'll strip committee assignments? >> i didn't make that threat. >> mike rogers did. >> you're saying i made the threat. let's be very clear. i did not make the threat and no, members are not going to lose their committee assignments. >> how long will it drag out for at this point? >> i'd love to know, but we're working through and we made
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good progress today. >> most of mccarthy's supporters are sticking by him, but some others say their patience is wearing thin. >> i've hated it the entire time. i've been really honest about that, but i think it's necessary. all of these conversations that are happening, but i really want to see us to come together. >> if there's a deal and ten of the 20 move, i think that people stay with them. if there's no deal and we have another vote of 20, i think people are going to start looking. >> more now from cnn's capitol hill correspondent. >> reporter: kevin mccarthy's hunt for 218 votes needed to be speaker continues. we are told at cnn kevin mccarthy did put pen to paper and made a concrete offer to the critics and holdouts that he hopes will give them enough con sessions to get him the
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votes for speaker. critics were hauled into his office and invited to review the offer. however, leaving that meeting a number of the holdouts were very tight-lipped and have not said whether they changed their vote. so it is likely we could see some movement today as people have time to process and digest what this offer is, but sources caution to cnn this could potentially only move around ten votes, ten out of the 20 votes against kevin mccarthy. that still leaves kevin mccarthy short of 218 votes he needs to become speaker and there could be between four to six republicans who will not vote for kevin mccarthy under any circumstances. he can only afford to lose four votes. so it could still be a tough road ahead for him and meanwhile senior republicans are worried that he is giving away concession after concession and he might not get anything in return. so that's the state of play as we head into the next vote today. congress will adjourn at noon.
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we'll see whether kevin mccarthy can show some momentum. melanie zanona, cnn, capitol hill. >> the chaos on the hill is more than a major embarrassment for republicans. lawmakers say it's a serious threat to national security. members cannot be sworn in without a speaker and that means no national security briefings or access to classified material. members of congress are unable to authorize or stop a war and a number of key national security committees including intelligence and armed services are on hold. here's u.s. state department spokesperson ned bryce. >> the first few days of any congressional term is usually spent on procedural elements, but if this continues on, there will be concerns. the hill has an indispensable function, oversight role, authorization role. we want to hear their voice in
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our foreign policy. it is much more difficult to do that when there is not a seated house of representatives, but this is the process. >> joining me now from california, kabc talk radio host john phillips and in washington democratic strategist and cnn political commentator rhea cardona. i know the term has been coined popcorn caucus, but we three are it right now. i was watching for hours trying to follow what was going on and things actually got worse for kevin mccarthy. the republicans were pretty serious, many of them criticizing the dissenters quite vocally and accused them of essentially burning down the house. i mean what's your opinion there. do you think that holds sway importantly with republican voters? >> no, i don't. i don't think republican voters are necessarily following the
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ins and outs of this internal caucus conflict. i think largely the 20 some odd votes that are not with kevin mccarthy at this point are largely on the same page with kevin mccarthy when you look at the big picture, the grand scheme of things. they may not like specific policy positions he's taken. they may not like the way he counts votes. they may not like the cut of his jib, but the reality is that the democrats control the u.s. senate. the democrats control the white house. so if you're a republican, the role of the house of representatives is to block a lot of what the democrats are going to try to push through the united states senate that the white house would like to sign. on that subject, which is what the house is going to be doing the next two years, those two sides are on the same page, mccarthy and the 20 votes that aren't with him. so i would imagine as they sit in a room staring at one another, yelling at one another, having the food fight at a certain point they're
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going to have to iron these things out because they want to block that agenda and they can't do it unless they reach kumbaya. >> further to make your point, john, the voice of reason here was georgia representative, believe it or not, marjorie taylor greene, who said to cnn that's not serious, what was going on in the house. i don't think that's leadership and yet just to play devil's advocate, speaking of marjorie taylor greene, she built the template on extremism. arguably, she's built a fortune in fundraising for her campaigns on it as well. so maybe the defectors are just looking at that and saying hey, that works for us, too. >> absolutely. i think one of the things that people need to remember in all this is that mccarthy made his bed. the fact that right after the insurrection and let's remember we're coming upon the anniversary of it and sadly, what's going on in the house right now is a metaphoric
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insurrection that is keeping the house essentially under the thumb of those who caused it last time around and what that means is that the republican party is responsible for what's going on right now because they have given all of the power to the extremists, the maga wing and it is ironic that marjorie taylor greene is on the side of kevin mccarthy and wanting to move forward business, but, yes, she is absolutely part of the problem because she and others have demonstrated that you can actually make sure to not get anything done by trying to extract what you want from republican leadership and kevin mccarthy has shown that he is willing to continue to be included in these corrupt faustian bargains.
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who knows what else he's giving away that is not going to give him the ability to govern if he ever gets to be speaker, which i don't think there is a path for him to become speaker if you know math and i don't understand what it is that their plan is. there's no plan b apparently and it makes us all look like a joke. it looks like the gop is a banana republic unto themselves who are focused specifically on their narcissistic demands and they have no interest in actually governing. and i think to ted price's point at the end of the day if this continues the way that it is, it is going to put the national security of the country in jeopardy. >> thankfully most people say we're not there yet, but, john, what about the contrarian view here? if you talk to the never kevins, they say look, we have spoken to voters who want a
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near revolution in washington anyway and do you think they speak for a significant obviously not a majority, but do they speak for a significant minority of americans who may be cheering them on from the sidelines? >> well, they ran on subjects. they ran on going against inflation. they ran on crime. they ran on fixing the border and their voters want them to fix those problems and if they see leadership as standing in the way of whatever changes it is that they ran on on those subjects, then yeah. i mean i'm sure they certainly get an earful of that. look, the reality is kevin mccarthy has very small margins in the house. he doesn't have control over his caucus the way that nancy pelosi did over hers, which she ruled with an iron fist in a gucci glove. he is going to have to bring back these committee chairmen and subcommittee chairmen and make the house run like it used to when all of the power wasn't in the speaker's office, but it
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rested in the committees. that's the only way for him to make this work. >> yeah. kevin mccarthy would take gloves from anywhere right now, anything that would do the magic trick. maria, we did have former president donald trump weigh this here. what do you make of the fact that he supported kevin mccarthy it seems like years ago? it was only the other day and yet it didn't seem to move the needle. why not? >> well, i think a couple reasons. a lot of republicans who are very anxious to turn the page from donald trump controlling the party would tell you that it is his failing essentially support within the republican party that it's dwindling, but i actually don't think that it was a full throated support. i don't think he's done everything that he can to support kevin mccarthy. i think for obviously reasons and i think probably he's enjoying this. you know, kevin mccarthy is somebody that right when the
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insurrection happened, he came out against donald trump, essentially put the blame on him and then we know that he did a complete 180 going down to mar-a-lago to kiss the ring. so kevin mccarthy has shown that he will twist in the wind and he will go with whatever direction the wind is blowing. donald trump knows that and so i think at the end of the day there are people who still, still have a lot of support for and still really like donald trump within republican party and all of this may not be about donald trump, but it's about trumpism. it's about what he put in place. it's about what he started and it is about what happened two years ago and the fact that so many of those people are still within the republican caucus and they are the ones who are in control right now. they are wagging the dog and that is i think the ultimate
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problem that anyone, if kevin mccarthy gets there speaker and again, i don't see a path for him to get there, but whoever becomes speaker is going to have a huge problem in actually doing the business of the people. like john said, what they were elected to do, i don't see them having the ability to do that if kevin mccarthy gives into all the concessions and one person can call for his downfall. how is that going to work when, you know, all of these issues that they don't like come up like raising the debt ceiling? >> john, to you as well, just to pick up on what maria was saying, what do you think this will do in terms of the institution no matter if it was a kevin mccarthy or someone else? by the way, do you see it being kevin mccarthy? >> well, i think there's still a path for kevin mccarthy to get there. this is how our democracy works. you go back to james madison
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and james madison talked about warring factions where you have these food fights and you end up with compromise where not everyone doesn't get what they want, all of what they want, but everyone gets some of what they want. democracy is messy. it's not always neat with a bow tied around the top, but at some point they will work this out and move on with their agenda. >> and yet that would weaken the institutions you would think? >> no, no. the house of representatives has always been drama central. this is something that's not new to that institution. it's not new to our democracy. certainly the fight for speaker is something that we haven't seen in a long time, but fights over the -- >> in over 100 years. >> fights over all of those things, you know, buckle up because when government is divided, you're going to see a lot of it. >> on that note we'll end it
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for now. i'll remind you we're only ending for a few hours here, at noon eastern time back on the floor. i will be watching, as will kevin mccarthy and team, i'm sure. john phillips, maria cardona, thanks so much. >> thanks, paula. now ukraine and its allies are not putting any stock in russia's proposed ceasefire that would go into effect less than an hour from now, in fact. president vladimir putin is pushing for a 36-hour break in hostilities so people can mark orthodox christmas, but ukraine is dismissing the idea as cynical propaganda in an attempt to buy time. meantime turkey says its president is ready to play mediator in future peace talks between russia and ukraine. mr. putin is making it clear he's not ready to give up much political ground as of yet. for more on this, our nic robertson has followed the latest from london. good to see you. putin's ceasefire is supposed
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to take effect within the hour. ukraine has been blunt, right? they see this as just another ploy and yet what do you expect to see in the next 36 hours? could it be a period of quiet? >> some of the areas in the country are so hard fought there are pinch battles just to gain a couple hundred meters, even less, just a couple meters at time. so if the russian governments go silent and russian troops sit in their trenches, there's an opportunity here for the ukrainian forces to take advantage. so it seems in those conditions how do you have a unilateral ceasefire? maybe we'll see see a lessening of shooting and shell going on maybe. the president said heso, you know, the ukrainian side will be very skeptical about anything they see happening along the front line right now.
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>> who can blame them given everything that's happened in the last few months when they tried to call for a truce to get troops out of harm's way. the context here is important, though, nic. each side seems to be preparing for months of fighting, if not years, and yet we have the turkish leader working the phones, right? why? >> he has vested interest in this. he can be a broker between both sides. he has business interests with russia. he has commercial interests with ukraine. the turkish economy can be affected if the war goes long and gets worse. that's a vested interest, right? he would like to be the middle man, but there's nothing really in the middle ground that he can work with. when he told putin yesterday according to his readout of their phone call that he should call a unilateral ceasefire and except some more real terms of what a lasting peace could look like, putin came back with his version of that which is i'm going to keep the territory of those four regions and that's not going to fly at all with
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ukraine. erdogan's trying to get in there to be a middle man, but there's nothing to hold on in the middle ground, nothing at all. president zelenskyy said very clearly i've got this ten-point peace plan and reiterated yesterday look, i put it out in november. russia had lost 82,000 troops by that point. he said, "we put forward a christmas ceasefire option in the middle of december. by then russia had lost 95,000 troops and now he says russia finally wants an orthodox christmas ceasefire, they've lost 110,000 troops." reality is that this ceasefire plays better for putin at home than anywhere else because the war is unpopular. so no middle ground, an unpopular war in russia, putin tries to gain something at home. nothing changes in the battlefield. >> nothing at all, as you said. he's playing to the crowd at home. it seems this is what inspired this in the first place. we will continue to monitor it
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the next few hours. ukraine's ground troops are getting more armor to protect them when they head into battle. the u.s. and germany are promising to deliver new infantry fighting vehicles to the ukrainian army. they include the u.s. bradleys. these armored vehicles are used to move troops around the battlefield, but they can also serve as antique tank weapons. germany is pledging to deliver its martyr fighting vehicles along with u.s.-made patriot missiles. the new military equipment comes as ukraine prepares for an expected uptick in fighting in spring. the suspect in the idaho student killings makes his first court appearance as disturbing new details emerge in court filings including a roommate who saw a man in the house on the morning of the attack. plus the news so many u.s. football fans have been waiting for, the young player who suffered a cardiac arrest on the field, he's woken up now. he's not out of the woods yet, but the news is good. we'll have that when we come
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cnn obtained audio from the moment buffalo bills player damar hamlin suffered a cardiac arrest during monday night football. 11 now to how medical personnel reacted after his collapse on the field. listen. >> go ahead and go over to the cot. i don't like how he went down. >> we'll need everybody. all called. all called. we need everybody. >> call. everybody. we need everybody out, everybody, the cot with medics, all of you and get woods out here. >> damar hamlin is thankfully doing much better now, but remains on a ventilator at university of cincinnati hospital and his road to recovery as you can imagine will be long. doctors say he's communicating by nodding and shaking his head and by moving his hands and
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feet. he's also writing brief notes and get this, the first one asking if the bills won the game. medical personnel at the game are being applauded meantime for their quick response. >> the fact that he had highly trained professionals from the buffalo bills in addition to having paramedics, emergency physicians, respiratory therapists at his bedside less than a minute from the collapse. that speaks to that ability that demonstrates he had good profusion to his brain that led to no identifiable neurologic deficit. >> he's moving his hands and feet and again, appears to be neurologically intact to both our exam and our neurology consultants' exams, so appears to be doing well. >> near miraculous really. mean team the nfl announced it officially canceled game
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between the bills and bengals. it was suspended in the first quarter after hamlin went down. the commissioner called the decision difficult but necessary. the man accused of brutally killing four university of idaho students did not enter a plea during his first appearance in court thursday. just released court documents reveal new information about the suspect. >> reporter: bryan kohberger in a moscow, idaho courtroom, only a five minute drive away from the crime scene. >> the maximum penalty for this offense if you were to plead guilty or be found guilty is death or imprisonment for life. do you understand? >> yes. >> reporter: charged with four counts of murder, the accused killer with zero visible emotion on his face. just before his initial court appearance began the unsealing of the probable cause affidavit
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with disturbing and potentially damning information. we've known two other roommates were in the house the morning of the murders, but it was a mystery if either of them heard or saw anything. now we know a roommate with the initials d.m. told investigators she was in her room and heard crying. the affidavit prepared by a moscow, idaho police corporal has this disturbing detail. she opened the door the third time after she heard crying and a figure clad in black clothing and a mask that covered the person's mouth and nose walking towards her. she described the figure as 5'10 or taller, male, not muscular, athletically built with bushy eyebrows. the male walked past her as she stood frozen and walked past the sliding glass door. d.m. locked herself in a room after seeing the male. the affidavit said earlier when d.m. heard crying from one of the victims' rooms, she heard a male voice say something to the effect of it's okay. i'm going to help you. it's not clear if the intruder
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ever saw d.m. the description helped provide valuable information when police found a hyundai elantra at an apartment building 15 minutes across the state line in pullman, washington, and learned the owner matched that description. the affidavit has this chilling set of details. the police officer saying as he entered one of the bedrooms, i could see two females in a single bed in the room. both kaylee goncalves and madison mogen were deceased. the sheet was processed and had ka-bar, usmc and the united states marine corps insignia stamped on. it there was a single source of male dna left on the button snap of the knife sheath. according to the affidavit, last week pennsylvania agents recovered the trash from the
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kohberger family residence located in albrightsville, pennsylvania. dna from kohberger's father was retrieved. the father's dna proved what was found in the murder house is the son's dna. police determined the murders were carried out between 4 a.m. and 4:25 a.m. a review of footage from multiple videos obtained from the king road neighborhood showed multiple sightings of suspect vehicle one starting at 3:29 a.m. and ending at 4:20 a.m. there are only a few cars that enter and exit this area during the time frame. all details on the affidavit are specific. it's not clear if police know of a motivation or if the accused murderer knew the victims, but based on the affidavit, it appears the accused murderer targeted this house between june and the date of the murder in november, the police officer says kohberger's cell phone signal was received 12 times near the house of the victims over a period of five months before the stabbings. all these occasions except for one occurred in the late evening and early morning hours
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of the respective days. >> we are adjourned. >> these details only add to the pain of the victims' family members, some of whom were in court for this hearing. >> it's obviously an emotional time for the family seeing the defendant for the first time. this is the beginning of the criminal justice system and the family will be here for the long haul. >> reporter: another disturbing detail in the affidavit, authorities say that a cell signal from the alleged murderer was detected about five hours after the murders were committed in the very same neighborhood of the inference is the alleged killer went back to the scene afterwards. a couple things not in the affidavit include motivation for the killings and also if the alleged murderer knew any of the victims. gary tuchman, cnn, moscow, idaho. kevin mccarthy's bid for u.s. house speaker is held up by a small group of republican hardliners. we'll look at who they are and
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u.s. house republican leader kevin mccarthy is hoping the 12th time is the charm in his bid to become the next speaker. a small group of conservative holdouts managed to deny him the gavel over the course of 11 votes in the past three days. mccarthy has already made some major concessions in talks with members of his own party are ongoing. the house is scheduled to reconvene today at noon for the next vote, but without a speaker house members can't be
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sworn in and government business is at a standstill. >> this is a new thought we're going to have to have. we have a five-seat majority. so it's not one side's going to get more. it's the entire conference will have to learn how to work together. so it's better that we go through this process right now so we can achieve the things we want to achieve for the american public, what our commitment was. so if this takes a little longer and it doesn't meet your deadline, that's okay because it's not how you start. it's how you finish. if we finish well, we'll be very successful. >> okay. how did we get here? the group holding up mccarthy's speakership bid, it's called the never kevins. it's only about 20 lawmakers or so. that would mean it's less than 10% of house republicans. they're associated with the so- called freedom caucus which is comprised of the most
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conservative lawmakers in the house. cnn's sunlen serfaty takes take closer look at who they are. >> reporter: they have become some of the most obstructionist and antagonistic republican members on capitol hill. >> fed up with the ways of the swamp and fed up with leadership that fails us telling us to vote along a democrat agenda that is completely failing america. >> reporter: the house freedom caucus, a small but feisty group of republican rebels that has become a thorn stuck firmly in the side of republican leadership for nearly a decade. >> what i do not support is blindly supporting legislation that is critically flawed at its core because of, oh, we're in the minority. >> reporter: building a brand on challenging gop leaders, earning them various nicknames from their own party like legislative terrorist and a taliban 19. >> being told by our own republican leadership well,
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it's 90% good. it's 90% tasty. it's 90% pure. there's only 10% poisons and toxins in it, but drink it anyway. >> reporter: the group has been at the center of some of the biggest fights on capitol hill. >> it looks like we could be in for a very long term shutdown at this point. >> reporter: with consistently making the task of governing more challenging. >> i don't want us to become a factionalized majority. i want us to become a unified majority. >> reporter: to the frustration of past house republican speakers. >> i share frustration. about 90% of our conference is for this bill to repeal and replace obamacare and about 10% are not. >> reporter: the freedom caucus was involved in former house speaker john boehner's ouster in 2015. >> on any given day in my case there were two or three dozen what i call knuckleheads who wanted chaos. they wanted it all their way or no way. >> reporter: he stepped down amid difficulty managing the faction. >> the people on the fringes have a bigger platform to make
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their point and, frankly, create chaos. >> reporter: later that year they blocked kevin mccarthy's first bid for speaker. >> we're looking for a speaker who works with conservatives rather than against us. >> reporter: having a hand in his withdrawal then from the race. >> i think i shocked some of you. >> reporter: the caucus was first founded in 2015. born out of the tea party movement. >> do what we told the voters we were going to do. >> reporter: with founding members like congressman jim jordan, ron desantis and mark meadows among others under the original founding principles of open, accountable and limited government, the constitution and the rule of law. the group attempts to operate with a bit of mystique. >> we would have to kill you if we told you. >> reporter: they don't publish their member list, which is around 35 members, and as now a small number of them are again threatening to derail the next speaker. >> if you want to drain the swamp, you cannot put the biggest alligator in charge of
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the exercise. >> reporter: their fight has become personal, emboldened in the culmination of this morning. >> the president needs to tell kevin mccarthy that sir, you do not have the votes and it's time to withdraw. >> reporter: sunlen serfaty, cnn, washington. today marks the second anniversary of the january 6th insurrection at the u.s. capitol. u.s. capitol police stepped up security ahead of several planned protests at the capitol and supreme court. president biden will award presidential citizens medals to 12 individuals and among them is the late officer brian sicknick who died one day after he was attacked while trying to protect the capitol. on thursday sicknick's estate filed a civil lawsuit in federal court against two individuals involved in the riot as well as against former president donald trump. diana and camilla, drug use and a brawl with his brother,
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shocking new details have been leaked to the media ahead of the official release of prince harry's new book "spare." some of them involving princess diana, now according to the guardian, prince harry tried to contact her through a woman who claimed to have "powers" and she reportedly offered him this message from his mother. you're living a life she couldn't. you're living a life she wanted
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for you. the article says the woman told harry his mother said she knew he had "so many questions" and that answers would come in time. harry reportedly wrote that he recognized there was a high percentage chance of humbuggery. in a recent network interview the duke shared more light on his alleged brawl with his brother. harry said, "william wanted many he to hit him back, but i chose not to," adding that he saw a red mist in william that he had experienced himself. cnn's bianca nobilo is in london for us following all of this. by any measure, these are stunning revelations and yet there are more details. >> reporter: stunning for so many reasons because of the content of the allegations, because for anybody to tell the entire world about the intimate details of their life and their
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family's experiences is quite staggering, but also because it's coming from prince harry who is a famous member of the british royal family whose motto is never complain, never explain. so for all of those reasons it makes what we're learning even more dramatic. we're learning more details about how prince harry was told by king charles, then prince charles, that his mother had died, the story that you just relayed about visiting a psychic who also told a story about how princess diana was supposedly present at christmastime when prince harry and meghan markle's son archie broke a christmas ornament of queen elizabeth ii. we're hearing more about harry's partying days, admissions of drug taking, cocaine, magic mushrooms and of his time in the army which a former national security adviser to the uk said he would have advised against. he talks about having killed 25 people, about how they did that, seeing those on the battlefield as chess pieces
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rather than human beings. some in the military community wondering if that can present a security threat to his family and we're also learning through the prerecorded interviews that accompany the release of this book about prince harry's own view of how he used to approach the press in the united kingdom and how he learned through the treatment of his wife meghan markle more disappointing details he believes about the way that they approach what they do. take a listen. >> what meghan had to go through was similar in some part to what kate and what camilla went through, very different circumstances, but then you add in the race element which was what the british press jumped on straight away, i went into this incredibly naive. i had no idea the british press was so bigoted. hell, i was probably bigoted before the relationship with meghan. >> reporter: you think you were? >> i don't know. put it this way. i didn't see what i now see.
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>> reporter: paula, these revelations about himself and his family members including what we've been discussing for the last 24 hours, this physical fight where prince william reportedly punched harry, hit him and then threw him to the ground injuring his back. now this is all the stranger when you consider prince harry had said he wants reproachment. he's seeking to rebuild the relationships with his brother and father and restore that trust and says after sharing these revelations with the world that the ball is in their court. >> we're also not hearing anything officially from buckingham palace or king charles. we'll wait to see if they feel compelled to respond in the coming days as more details emerge. good to see you. thanks so much for that update. now california is cleaning up from a series of severe winter storms. just ahead, a look at the destruction the rain and wind
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or if you had a vaccine or plan to. emerge tremfyant®. with tremfya®... ask your doctor about tremfya® today. california is getting a small break after a so-called bomb cyclone roared through the state and then moved north towards canada. the powerful storm brought snow to the mountains, widespread flooding and hurricane force wind gusts. 7million people are still at this hour under flood watches in that state. one hard hit area is the coastal town of capitola where high surf caused flooding and destruction. after nearly one month pause in activity we are in hawaii and there you have it. kilauea, that volcano, is
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spewing lava again. it began erupting thursday inside its summit crater. authorities say it's contained, though, within the crater and that there is no danger to residential communities. i want to thank you for your company. newsroom continues with max foster and bianca nobilo from london up next. ubrelvy helps u fight migraine attacks. u rise to the challenge. u won't clock out. so u bring ubrelvy. it can quickly stop migraine in itsts tracks within 2 hours... ...without worrying if it's too late or r where you are. unlike older medicines, ubrelvy is a pill that directly blocks a protein believed to be a cause of migraine. do not take with strong cyp3a4 inhibitors. most common side effects were nausea and tiredness. migraine pain relief starts with u. learn how abbvie could help you save. ask about ubrelvy, the anytime, anywhere migraine medicine.
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