tv CNN Newsroom CNN February 6, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PST
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lord, what a shocking moment there from turkey. good morning to you this monday, i'm jim sciutto. >> and i'm erica hill. the death toll continues to rise after this catastrophic 7.8 magnitude earthquake which struck near the border of turkey and syria. more than 1,800 people are now reported dead, but there are concerns that that number could ultimately reach into the tens of thousands. at this hour desperate rescue
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operations underway. crews searching for survivors who may be trapped under piles of rubble. here you see this is the moment that a child you see in the arms there of that rescue worker, a child was pulled from debris this was in northwest syria, a region which of course already heavily impacted after years of a bloody civil war. >> in each city, in each village, across northwest sudan there are people under rubble. the number of trapped people under the rubble, it's countless up to now. we don't have exact number. >> countless. multiple powerful after shocks have also been reported across the region throughout the morning. we are live in turkey with the very latest. also this morning for the irs time now china has admitted that the balloon spotted over latin america, this of course another one in addition to the one that went over the u.s. belongs to china, but insists once again it was being used for flight tests and seriously
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deviated off its intended course due to weather. here in the u.s. senior administration official tells cnn that chinese spy balloon the one shot down off the coast of south carolina this weekend was not the first to come this way. in fact, three others flew across the continent or parts of it during the trump administration, however, those were only discovered, those flight paths, after joe biden took office. cnn is off the coast in south carolina where u.s. teams are now looking for remnants of that balloon and collecting them. you see some pictures there of what they brought back. first, however, to that story of this morning. frantic rescue operations right now in turkey and syria, desperate ones to try to save lives. jomana karachi is in istanbul, turkey. the devastation so clear, what do we know about the latest on the ground? >> reporter: absolutely devastating situation, jim. the turkish president describes
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this as the biggest disaster his country has faced in about a century. a disaster like no other. this country or syria in terms of a natural disaster has faced in decades and decades since that 1939 devastating earthquake here in turkey. a 7.8 magnitude earthquake striking at about 4:00 in the morning right in the middle of the night as people are indoors, in their homes sleeping. scenes of utter devastation, we are seeing coming from the turkey as well. syria the epicenter of this earthquake was a province in southern turkey, but the actual earthquake zone stretches across at least ten provinces in the southern part of this country and across the border into syria, a country that in no way is equipped or capable dealing with this sort of natural disaster. as you know very well, this is a country where the infrastructure and services have been decimated by more than a decade.
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we're getting reports of the devastation there, more than 800 people killed in both rebel-held areas in northwestern ear i can't syria, some of the most vulnerable parts of the country and again in the government-controlled areas. a lot of concern about the kind of support, assistance they are going to need. aid has been very slow to come to this part of syria in the past few months. we have heard there eight agencies that have been appealing to the international community to do more to support and help the many, the hundreds of thousands would have been displaced so many times in northwestern syria, in dire need of assistance and aid and now they find themselves in this situation and here as well in turkey absolute disaster. we have heard the government requesting international support, this is a country that is very capable, very experienced in dealing with natural disasters, its deployed its military, its deployed search and rescue teams from across the country but they triggered a level 4 emergency as
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they called it, requesting international assistance and we are hearing several countries have offered assistance. the turkish president saying more than 45 countries, nato and the eu are standing ready and starting to provide support and aid to turkey right now. jim, erica? >> and even the pictures coming out, we know that those needs are extensive. jomana karadsheh, thank you. chad myers is standing by at the cnn weather center. the magnitude of this earthquake and then the magnitude of these after shocks, help us understand what's happening in the region. >> 7.8 is the number, that is the magnitude, we don't use richter scale anymore, if you see that on a tweet the person is probably not as accurate as someone who calls it a magnitude earthquake, but when you get a 7.8 we don't talk about really the epicenter, it's almost an epi line because an entire part of the country ruptures.
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a large expanse of the land ruptures or can even slide against each other. this is called a slip strike, which means one land was here, one of the plates here, another plate was here and they go in opposite directions or one goes in one direction. here are the aftershocks pretty much in a line. now, this was the initial quake and the initial shaking. 190 kilometers across, more than 100 miles of ripping of the land, that fault moved more than 100 miles in that direction. not at one time, it may have only moved a couple of meters, a couple of yards, but for the longest time we're not talking about the focus or the epicenter, all along that line that i showed you in red, that's where it shook. that's where the land moved. right between the an toll yan plate and the arabian plate and you would expect it because it's
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right there. that's the line and the area i drew a little bit ago right along those two plate boundaries. there has been a 7.5 earthquake aftershock after that but not even along that fault, a little bit farther to the north about 60 miles or so. we will have to see what that does. we know that that has already caused damage as well in a separate shake. >> more than 20 years ago there was a devastating earthquake in turkey as well. many thousands killed then. chad myers, good to have you there, we will continue to monitor. joining us now live from istanbul is an international journalist from turkey. it's good to have you here. i understand this story is personal for you as well, your family from malatia in the central part of the country, you're trying to get there yourself. have you heard anything from them about what they're seeing there? >> thanks for having me, jim and erica. as you say that malatia is my
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hometown and now we wake up to hell this morning. the city i grew up in was destroyed after the earthquake. it looks like a chernobyl. its earthquake is the biggest destruction in the history of turkey and the 3,000-year-old castle has been destroyed. perhaps it explains the situation. i have to say that still many people in the destroyed buildings, they are still trying to find someone, somehow, to try to get out from the destroyed buildings. actually, now in turkey people -- everyone, everyone, people are now shocked and in
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panic. even my twitter messages, i'm looking every time and people sending me messages in the destroyed buildings. they are sending videos. yes, they are saying that we need help, please send -- send help, send an ambulance, but we cannot help. these buildings may be more than 3,000 buildings that's destroyed in turkey and it's huge numbers and we are expecting that it's getting. >> the number of buildings and the videos you are receiving, there has been a lot of talk about the 1999 earthquake and the discussion about building codes in turkey after that. are you concerned that not enough change in the years since that earthquake and that that's part of what we're seeing today?
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>> yes. actually in turkey people criticized the government why we are facing the same situation in turkey. we are in an earthquake area and our buildings are so weak. why we are living in these situations over time. let me fix it. some sources say that maybe this situation, maybe it's more than istanbul earthquake. we are expecting big numbers and i have to tell -- say it and turkey is a huge -- i'm sorry, this earthquake happened in a huge area and the government still cannot touch village. we don't know how many villages are destroyed after this earthquake. we will see the numbers, maybe
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tomorrow, maybe after. it's not clear yet. this number is not clear yet. and for this reason turkey called for international help for all of countries and united states, ukraine start sending the help. >> yes, as we just heard from jomana a level 4 calling for help globally, as you mentioned, these just horrific and heartbreaking videos of people in the rubble you say sending you videos needing to be rescued. we will continue to stay on this. so much more to learn as officials are able to get into different levels of the country. we appreciate you joining us. thank you. well, today china admitting another balloon, the one spotted flying over the skies of latin america does belong to them. chinese officials say that balloon was being used for flight tests.
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the pentagon, however, claims it is another surveillance balloon. >> the pentagon not buying chinese explanations. just two days ago you will probably remember the u.s. military fighter jet an f-22 with a single missile shot down a suspected chinese surveillance balloon six miles off the coast of north carolina. the navy is now searching for what remains of that balloon on the surface and below the waves. cnn's dianne gallagher joins us live from a boat near that search. i know they're keeping you at a distance, i'm curious what you're able to see where you are and what exactly and how much are u.s. navy divers hoping to find. >> reporter: so, jim, about half an hour ago the captain of our boat, the linda ann, we are on a shrimp boat here off the coast of myrtle beach, was essentially told by the coast guard this is as close as we can get. i can't move very much because the cell signal for me to connect with you a a little dodgy. so i'm going to just do limited
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motions to let you know behind me you may be able to see very much in the distance there are some coast guard vessels that have set up a perimeter. we are roughly three miles off the coast of the myrtle beach shoreline in south carolina at the moment. that perimeter is set up. within that perimeter that's where the recovery efforts are taking place. according to a u.s. senior military official we are talking about 47 feet of water, which is a lot more shallow than they had anticipated when they shot down that suspected chinese spy balloon. we are told that they are going to use navy divers as well as unmanned vessels to try to bring the structure up. they will put it on a salvage vessel, they will take that, then, back to the quantico area so intelligence officials can examine what they bring up. i can tell you also last night in the north myrtle beach area we saw what seemed to be items that were being brought up, but cnn was not able to independently confirm.
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we did reach out to the u.s. navy to see if, in fact, that's what those u.s. navy officials were bringing up but they would not confirm it for us. i can tell you out here our captain says that this area right now at this time of day is usually very busy. we are the only vessel out here aside from that perimeter. the coast guard said this is as close as we can get. >> dianne gallagher, appreciate it. thank you. with me now to discuss what happens next retired army major general spider marks and zolan cano youngs. general, if i can begin with you, the possibility of retaliation and escalation whenever you have a super power firing at another super power. i want to play briefly an incident that occurred a number of years ago when i was on a u.s. surveillance flight around china in 2015 when the chinese navy warped us away. these flights continue every day. have a quick listen here.
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>> this is the chinese navy. please go -- >> they were warning away a u.s. besiden surveillance jet i was on at the time. the pa besiden is a crew ed flight. china made a not to veiled threat reserving the rights to take action against u.s. surveillance flights. i wonder what you rate the risk of chinese retaliation at this point. >> pretty low, jim. every one of those american flights that you described and what the united states intelligence community and our services do as a matter of routine is in international air space. that's available -- it's -- i mean, it's the governed commons, everybody can go there, everybody can do what they want. so when the chinese send these kinds of warnings, and you were a part of that on that pa besiden, also wear in mind in the early 2000s the chinese shot
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down the predecessor, the p 3 and it had to emergency land on an island. that, again, was an incursion, aggressive act on the part of the chinese. so for the united states to be concerned about retaliation, i think that's -- frankly the entire incident for the most part being flipped is a little bit of a nothing burger. this was an opportunity for the united states to declare our priority when they first detected the balloon to say we're going to do something with it. if this thing enters into the adis it's not because you wanted it to. we're going to take it down and deconstruct what took place and figure out what you guys are doing. i think that was the course that should have been taken. >> so zolan kanno-youngs, you were traveling with the president this weekend, i imagine you were asking questions about the decision-making process going into it. what was the level of u.s. concern about the national
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security risk from this surveillance balloon? did they take this down because of that risk or did they take it down in part because of concerns about political fallout in the u.s.? >> i think most of the concern had to do with whether or not shooting this spy balloon down earlier in the week could cause harm to anyone on the ground. at least based off of, you know, the statements that we got from numerous u.s. officials. when president biden came off air force one i did ask him to elaborate on some of the recommendations and advice he got from his own national security officials and he put -- he emphasized when asked about the timing of the downing of the balloon, he emphasized really that they were focused on the safety of those on the ground. that being said, that runs up against we're seeing some political criticism from republicans and it comes ahead of the state of the union that we know the white house wanted
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to focus on his economic agenda. so it's safe to assume that there are some around the president that are annoyed of the shadow this now casts around an address that they still want to focus on a slate of legislative achievements and the economy. >> general marks, you mentioned the 2001 incident within the ep-3 collided with a chinese jet, brought it down. there were a lot of analysis at the time that china was making a show of strength saying we're going to come up close and challenge those surveillance flights, but i suppose there are the escalations you want and the ones you didn't want or can't control. what kind of communications do you expect are going between the u.s. and chinese militaries now to avoid an escalation? >> jim, that's the great question and it starts with -- i don't want to venture into policy, i'm not a policy guy, but when you look at the secretary of state's decision
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not to go to beijing, i view this differently. i think he probably should have gone to beijing to keep those lines of communications open. that's exactly what you have to have in circumstances like this. you cannot shut down when the narrative is this is ratcheting up. we can't allow that to happen. look, i would say that when you look at this balloon technology, look, i've launched balloons with different sensors on the bottom of them when i've in different places around the globe. it's an effective collection platform. so for the united states to look at this and say it's a balloon, it's no big deal. it is a big deal and let's address it, balloons give you lighter, they give you layering, you have satellites, you can have balloon, you can have aircraft, et cetera, all of that as an intelligence guy makes sense to me but in this case i have to look at this more as a policy decision driven by policy than driven by intelligence collection concerns. >> we've certainly seen the politics inject td as zolan was saying there. thanks so much to both of you.
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of course, we will continue to bring the latest we're learning from syria and turkey today after that devastating earthquake and after shocks. rescuers desperately searching for survivors still trapped in the debris. those aftershocks are still coming. coming up next, though, ohio officials are telling one community to get out right now, a derailed train that has burned for days could, they fear, explode sending shrapnel as far as a mile away. we will have the latest coming up. on a bit lighter note coming up later a star-studded tribute to hip hop. viola davis and the newly minted egot and you can hand queen be another crown. what a might at the grammy's. we have a recacap. this thing, it's making me get an ice bath again. what do you mean? these straps are mind-blowing! they collelect hundreds of data points like hrv and rem sleep, so you know all you need for recovery.
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residents of a small town in ohio are being urged to leave their homes after a train carrying dangerous chemicals derailed and burst into flames and now there is concern that it could possibly explode. the fire itself has been burning for several days, this is in east palestine, ohio. >> officials fear there could be an explosion that could shoot pieces of that train in the form of shrapnel as far as a mile away. there are also concerns about air quality, chemicals seeping into the water supply. a lot to be concerned about. gabe cohen is following this story for us. gabe, what do we know about the hazardous materials that were on this train and are people listening to the warnings? >> reporter: jim, erica, that's our understanding that people are starting to listen to these because the sheriff's office has said if they don't listen to those evacuation orders they're going to be held accountable, they're going to be arrested. now, to those chemicals, officials say there has been a drastic temperature change in one of the railcars, one specific one that is carrying a
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chemical called vinyl chloride, it's used to make pvc pipes, some plastics, products like that. officials think because it has been heating up there could potentially be a catastrophic tanker failure and an explosion that could send deadly shrapnel flying up to a mile in any direction. right now crews are on the ground trying to figure out how to release those chemicals before they potentially blow. as you said they've been evacuating everyone who lives within a mile of that derailment and they are enforcing that radius this morning. even the police department has evacuated their communications center for safety reasons and the county sheriff says there are likely toxic chemicals that are pouring out this have train so people who don't leave are putting themselves in danger and they say they will potentially arrest people, especially if they have children in the house. jim, erica? >> wow. gabe, appreciate it. a lot to think about there, evacuating the communication
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center, that really gives you a sense of this. gabe, thanks. this morning a former prospective staffer is accusing republican congressman george santos now of sexual harassment. derek myers says that santos made an unwanted sexual advance towards him during a private encounter inside santos' congressional office. myers says that when he refused, he was later denied a job there. >> now he says he's filed a police report over that incident as well as a house ethics complaint which cnn has reviewed. sunlen serfaty has the latest update for us. the ethics committee, have we heard anything from the committee itself about a possible investigation here? >> well, erica, i a. spokeswoman for the ranking democrat of the house ethics committee confirmed that this complaint has been officially received but there is no word yet on launching a formal investigation. now, this allegation as you said comes from a man named derek myers and in the complaint he says that late last month on
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january 25th he was alone with the congressman in his office, he says it was then that santos grabbed his leg, reached for his groin area. myers said then he pushed his hand away and he left the office. now, at the time notably myers was not an official employee with the office. he says he was there in a volunteer capacity. he says he was waiting for some formal paperwork to go through for his official formal job with the office. but five days after that incident -- and this is myers' claim -- he says that he was called back by the office and they were asking him questions about his resumé, questions about his time as being a former reporter and then he says a few days after that conversation that his official job offer was rescinded by the congressman's office. notably santos, his office and his lawyer have not responded to repeated questions by cnn about this specific allegation, but erica and jim, as you know this
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is just one in a very long line of allegations about his background, about his resumé, his finances that are hitting the new congressman. >> no question. sunlen serfaty, thanks so much for covering. still ahead, we are live near a nato training base where germany's leopard tanks are in action. this as ukraine prepares to get the critical armor on to the front lines and soon. it's a big step. and, no matter how much i paid, it followed me eveverywhere. between the high interest, the fees... i felt trapped. debt, debt, debt. so i broke u up with my credit card debt and consolidated it into a low-rate personal loan from sofofi. i finally feel like a grown-up. break up with bad credit card debt. get a personal loan with no fees, low fixed rates, and borrow up to $100k. go to sofi.com to view your rate. sofi. get your money right. ♪ wayfair has deals so big that you might get a big head. because with savings so real...
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survivors under way in both countries. this is where a catastrophic -- a massive earthquake struck, it's now killed, the estimates, 1,900 people. sad fact is that number is expected to grow and a lot, possibly into the tens of thousands. scenes like this, entire buildings collapsed. >> it is just -- it is heartbreaking and so hard to wrap your mind around how many other areas may be just like these pictures. multiple powerful aftershocks have been reported across the region this morning. officials say at least 120 aftershocks have taken place in turkey. >> we are continuing to experiencing aftershocks. the last one was 7.6 so it's very, very strong. so we cannot go back to our apartments. >> cnn's jum in a scrjomana kari
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is in istanbul. there have been so many strong aftershocks and the concern is people can't go back into their buildings. >> reporter: absolutely, a big concern, erica, we were hearing from turkey's disaster and emergency management agency in the last few moments saying they've recorded 130 aftershocks. i mean, speaking to colleagues and people in southern turkey right now, they're very concerned. they don't know where to go. authorities are trying to create shelter for tens of thousands of people across this region. we are talking about a vast area of southern turkey, ten provinces that have been impacted by this earthquake and of course in syria as well. also unfortunately in the last few moments we have gotten an update with more than 2,300 people confirmed killed in turkey and syria right now, this is after turkish officials
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raised the death toll right now to nearly 1,500 people who have been confirmed killed, but we were talking about thousands of buildings that have been damaged, destroyed, many flattened across this earthquake zone. the concern is they don't really know yet how many people are trapped under the rubble so there is a lot of concern that the death toll is going to significantly increase in the coming hours. of course, we are running out of daylight hours right now making this already very complex search and rescue operation even harder for the teams on the ground. they are saying of course the current weather conditions, this winter storm, the ice, the snow making it very difficult for them to move around, to reach areas that they are going to try using helicopters to reach many of the devastated areas. of course, a lot of concern for what is going on across the border as well in syria, with
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hundreds of people killed, both in rebel-controlled areas in the northern part of the country. a very vulnerable population there, hundreds of thousands of people who have been displaced time and time again, living in absolutely miserable conditions in urgent need of aid at the best of times, so you can imagine the kind of conditions they are going through right now. and both countries, i can tell you right now, are calling for international support and help with the rescue operations as well as aid. we know that turkey is starting to get a lot of support from the international community and now calls for syria to get the same, especially in the rebel-held parts of the country that really have very little to deal with this catastrophic situation right now. >> goodness. just such deep concern for folks who may still be trapped under those many buildings. we know they are doing the best
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to find them. thanks so much. ukrainian troops today are set to begin training on german leopard tanks, this the equipment that ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy had fought of course for months to get. >> after a long debate, but they're going, as are u.s. tanks. this comes at a critical time as ukraine's defense minister says russia will likely mark or attempt to mark the anniversary of the invasion last year with what it hopes to be a major spring offensive. cnn international diplomatic editor nic robertson is live from a military base in estonia where nato is holding training exercises with the same equipment. you are getting a firsthand look at why it could be a while before we see these german-made leopard tanks on the front lines. why is that? it's a training question, isn't it? >> reporter: it is a training question. look, there's one of the leopard 2 tanks over my shoulder there, that's being used by the danish military at the moment as part of this big exercise, there are
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44 tanks here, theres a british challenger tanks. the deal with these tanks is the danish will tell you this, we've been speaking to some of their officers, you can put a crew in one of those and have the four individual people in it, the commander, the driver, the gener, all up to speed on their jobs in two weeks, but to get them to be actually as a team battle effective, that takes two months. then they've got to train up with a platoon, with a squadron, they have 14 of these tanks working together. that can take up to a couple of years they say. what they're training for here in some of the big take away lessons are from the battlefield maneuvers we're watching here, they're training combined forces, right? the exercise here is to do exactly what ukrainians want to do with their tanks which is punch through, but you use infantry to do it, the french and estonian infantry working with british and danish tanks to simulate that. and the takeaways here are that,
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again, it's training. you need to coordinate your infantry troops with your tank troops. this is getting -- the one behind me just over my shoulder it getting fueled up, that leopard 2 getting fueled up there. you have to have everything in place in the battlefield coordinated to be able to crack through those enemy lines. that's the take away here and this is going to be the challenge going forward for the ukrainian forces. but today for the first time they're getting their hands on these tanks, getting to train in them. that's a big step. >> yeah, an important first step. nic robertson, great to have you there. thank you. up next, the message president biden plans to deliver to americans during his state of the union address tomorrow night, and the pressure on the president now as he prepares to speak before a divided congress. behold... all that talalent! ♪ this is how we wowork now ♪ - [annnnouncer] ready to go back to school, but worried about the cost? southern new hampshire university offers
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today president biden returns to the white house from camp david as he prepares to deliver the state of the union address tomorrow night to a divided congress. his administration has already been out there previewing the president's message of building a stronger u.s. economy. in d.c. us capitol police ramping up security, adding a nonscaleable fence around the capitol grounds. joining me to discuss laura lopez white house correspondent for pbs news hour. good to see you this hour. look, the administration would love to focus solely as we know on the state of the union but the reality is this chinese balloon is what's dominating conversations in as we know. house republicans considering this note ahead of the state of the union that would criticize biden and his actions and response there. how much is this china spy balloon issue overshadowing the state of the union address?
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>> well, it's certainly something that the administration is going to have to address. we know that president biden in the past has made competitiveness with china and support of allied democracies a big piece of his speeches. he talked about this in his last state of the union speech and the white house has said to expect him to, again, address china and the administration's efforts to try to combat it. >> so as we watch that and see what, you know, may or may not make it in tomorrow night, there's also the reality of where things stand. the administration wants to talk about the economy, wants to tout some of the successes of the first two years of the biden presidency in this address. the reality is some of this polling isn't on president biden's side. the "washington post" abc poll 62% of americans think the president has not accomplished very much or little or nothing. barely more than a third say he's accomplished a great deal
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or good amount. is there a sense that anything he can say tomorrow will change those feelings? >> well, he's certainly going to try, erica, because the president is well aware and has talked in the past about when he was vice president with former president barack obama and he said that he didn't think that they did a good job of selling their wins on the affordable care act. so this entire year and this second half of his first term is very much focused on implementation and that sales job, trying to tell the american public what exactly was passed because we've seen in polling time and time again that they may not be aware of what was passed this that infrastructure law or aware of what was passed in the inflation reduction act. and some of those aren't even going to take effect until about this year, like prescription drug reform, so that's something that the president and vice president, kamala harris, are going to be talking about a lot and we've seen them in recent days, travel across the east coast on a tour to try to talk about the infrastructure law as
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well as they're going to travel again right after the state of the union, the president going to wisconsin. this is something that is going to be a big part of his run up to a potential 2024 run. >> laura, always good to see you. appreciate it. thank you. >> thank you. still ahead, she is known as queen bee, but grammy host trevor noah says you should now call her the g.o.a.t. beyoncé breaks a big record at the grammy's but fans still say she was robbed. you report to yourur boss, every afternoon. so beautiful.. so becoming a student again mimight seem impossible. hello, mi amor. but what if a school could be there for all of you? career, family, finances and mental health. well, it can. national university. supporting the whole you.
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well, beyonce has once again proven why she is the queen bee. last night she won four more grammy awards becoming the most highly decorated grammy artist of all time. >> thank you so much. i'm trying not to be too emotional. i'm trying to just receive this night. >> i mean, what a moment. you can understand why she would be emotional and in case you are not keeping track, she has 32
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trophies and she was shut out in some categories called album of the year which has some fans none too pleased. and a number of the fans say that she should have swept, but she did well, but she should have swept some of the categories. >> i think that when you love an artist or part of the fan base, you will feel that way, and she has a loud and outspoken fan base and i am part of the hive, and "renaissance" is incredible, and she is the most awarded grammy of all time and massive win, and imagine if that had not have happened, and it would have been a heartbreak, and she didn't win album of the year, but harry styles did, and he had a huge year, and had the movie with olivia wilde, "don't worry,
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darling" and he paved the way like justin timberlake, you leave a boy band and have an incredible solo career, and i know that his ex, taylor swift was up there to give him a standing ovation, because people were either routing for beyonce or adele, and i know that beyonce has not won album of the year, but she will accomplice it. >> and kim petras and first transgendered winner ever, and she made a powerful speech, and jim has a question, what will happen today. right, jim? >> well, the tickets for beyonce's tour go on sale today, and we had a fiasco with taylor swift's show, and is ticket master going to have a problem?
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>> well, they are under so much scrutiny that they enjoyed the fans to have a pre-sale sort of like taylor swift, but they said it is more foolproof, and they had the fans enter the presale, and then everybody else is entered into a lottery, and it is complicated, but they are going on sale today, and it is a massive tour, and the first tour in six years, but knowing beyonce, it is going to break the internet. >> massive tour and massive demand. and still to come, we are going to turkey where rescuers in turkey and syria where rescuers are trying to find those in the massive aftershock where at least 2,300 people have been killed and the numberer is
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