tv CNN Newsroom CNN April 6, 2023 11:00am-12:01pm PDT
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new eyes helping you discover untapped possibilities and relentlessly working with you to make them real. old school grid. new world ideas, morgan stanley why did we choose safelite? we're always working on a project loading up our suv one extra pushed and crack. so we schedule that safelite .com we were able to track our technician and knew exactly when he'd arrive. we can keep working. safe flight came to us . kendrick replaced our windshield and installed new wipers to protect our new glass that service on our time safely repair safelite replace. hello, everyone. i'm fredricka woodfield in new york. welcome to the cnn newsroom right now in nashville and extraordinary vote
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at the intersection of the second amendment, and the first protesters are rallying at the tennessee state capitol as three democratic lawmakers could lose their jobs today for doing this a week ago. democratic state representatives . justin jones, justin pearson and gloria johnson, using a bullhorn during a gun control rally at the capitol to call for action in the wake of last month's deadly shooting that left 39 year old children and three adults dead. the three democratic lawmakers are accused of breaking house rules at any moment. we expect their colleagues to vote on whether or not they should be expelled. cnn national reporter ryan young is live for us in nashville ryan lots of noise still ongoing, a lot of protesters that were with
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the lawmakers one week ago are back there today to support these three legislatures. yeah we really seen this swell fred. in terms of protesters, we have thousands earlier outside. now you can see this small crowd that's still behind me. some eventually made it on the insides of the protest to those lawmakers could hear their voices. let's not lose sight of this. we had a terrible tragedy in this community where we had six people lose their lives, including three children. and so this is what so many people have been protesting about. now. the focus is on this. decorum issue where these three lawmakers and one of them is that even admitted that they broke the rules. they used a bullhorn, and they said they were trying to bring attention to what's going on in this state the same time this is run by the republicans, so they have a chance to vote these three out this afternoon. i have a protester with me. his name is kevin. he's a school teacher. you felt that you needed to be here today. why did you want to be here and have your voice heard? well the three
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legislators whose expulsion is being voted on today. they spoke for me, and i figured being here was the least the least that i could do for them today as a teacher. how concerned are you for your students and for where we are as a country with all the shootings. i don't know what to say to them. when i go to school every day. they they asked me if i can keep them safe. and i i'm i lie. i told them i can, but i feel like i can't you wanted to be a teacher for a reason. did you ever think you'll be confronting this sort of situation in our country? i can see the emotion in you right now . what is this, like to go to school every day with this concern? it's just it's deeply deeply painful. um you know, it's just you just feel powerless and yeah, i it's deeply painful. the other side may say, look, we can't
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legislate some of the violence out. but if you could talk to republican lawmaker right now to touch their heart, not to yell at them, but to say what about common sense gun laws that would you want them to hear from you right now? i mean, just listen to us. i mean, there's absolutely no reason we should have assault weapons available to citizens in the public. it serves absolutely no purpose, and it brings death and destruction on children. on children. appreciate your time. thank you. um kevin's obviously very passionate about his students. there's been a lot of pain out here on monday. there was a lot of students here as well. i talked to a lot of parents who are also very upset, and you can hear their cries right now. they want someone to come talk to them. we're not sure how this is going to end in terms of any sort of gun laws being passed. but we do believe that with the republicans in control, this expulsion could happen within the next hour or so. so when you put all this
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together, you understand how painful this is. as for community, especially after what's happened in the last few weeks, and let's not forget it took those officers that go in and neutralize the threat. in terms of trying to put a stop to this, but so many questions about will this be the last time will there be another? how do they move forward? how do they stop it? and teachers like kevin here are feeling that pain on the day to day basis, fred yes, very emotional for mr foster there, and for so many. that's why you've got the dozens of people who are out there. protesting really in the name mostly right in the name of protecting children in schools, so i wonder ryan, have you learned if there is this feeling that this expulsion is eminent are those lawmakers gloria johnson, justin jones, justin pearson, are they saying whether they expect to come out and speak after this vote? um you know, i think that's that's the part here that republicans definitely have control and they
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believe that this could happen. we talked to several people just around the statehouse who believed this could finally go down. and while i'm standing here, fred, actually kevin still with me, and i just want to walk back over to him because he's still very emotional. and i was talking to friends about this. if this happens today, do you think this sends the wrong message to the community of these three lawmakers? are thrown out of this body. i'm absolutely i mean, they're they're here to speak for us and to have them removed and have the representation that we, you know that that we need to have our voices heard taken away from us. it just feels like i mean, it definitely sends the wrong message is anti democratic. it's flat out wrong. there's speaking for us. we need them there. i appreciate your passion. thank you for staying with us for a little while longer, fred, so, obviously you can hear the voices of the people. you can feel the pain. and then there's that idea of how do we move forward? if you can't have an
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argument on the other side? there are people who talk about decorum and the idea that you can't just go in the statehouse floor and do whatever you want, and the only way of body works if he followed the rules, so you hear from that side as well. some people think this is a punishment. that might step too far. and obviously there's a great divide here. we talked to a teacher earlier and she was saying people need to stop talking and red and blue and start talking with their hearts. and i think that spoke to a lot of people here because obviously there are people here who love the second amendment, and they're and they're obviously going to stick by that at the same time, you want people to be able to have both and have school safety as well. so we'll keep watching this fred and watch what's going on inside to tell you whenever something breaks down, and you know ryan while you were talking, we were looking at live pictures inside of the state capital, and we saw what appeared to be you know the legislators justin jones of nashville, gloria johnson of knoxville talking at a table. um it would be, of course, wonderful to know what it is that they are talking about. if
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they're talking about some imminent see here or whether there is any kind of groundswell of support. among legislators now suddenly for them, perhaps those legislators might be listening to the kind of passion outside of the capital there, and then, shortly thereafter, we saw a picture of live images of justin pearson of memphis who was kind of like tapping his heart, you know, and then also raising hand to the audience there. perhaps an acknowledgement of people who were expressing their support of them. is there any feeling given the level of emotion here, the passion is there any feeling that those particularly republicans who were dug in about their expulsion are listening to the constituents. they're listening to the protesters and perhaps rethinking. voting for expulsion. already see you nodding your head. no. yeah i haven't seen sort of any break there. yes, there's speaking
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about the quorum. there used to be diplomacy. that's a word that we don't use very often anymore in american politics, just the idea that someone could walk across the aisle and say, all right, we're going to maybe center you maybe maybe they face some sort of find that has not been the conversation at all. the passion for the folks who are out here. yes, they may feel a certain way. but the lawmakers on the inside have been voted in. this is a republican controlled state house. so if they make that decision to make this move today, um that is something that their voters put them in power to do. and that's been part of the conversation here. i'm not sure i heard one conversation yet that has reached across the aisle. either way in this and on top of all that you're focusing more time on talking about this procedure that we are the three babies and three workers who were killed last week and that's been a big frustration point for a lot of people here. i mean, they've been begging us to cover this more often. i mean, we've had some people ask us. why aren't we covering the funerals as
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well? and i get their passion? and i get their concern about why we haven't been doing that. but we try to bring as much light to this conversation as possible. and this is what the focus is right now. they also think some of these lawmakers are going to get off the hook now and not talk about gun laws in the future. all right, ryan young, we're going to check back with you there in nashville, um, to see when and if this vote is going to happen momentarily, thanks so much. all right. i'm also joined right now by a colleague of those tennessee lawmakers. state senator heidi campbell also represents the area where that nashville school shooting took place, and she has just announced that she is running for mayor of nashville. alright, state senator so good to see you. how do you see potentially this vote playing out? well, from what we've heard. the likelihood is that this vote is actually going to go through as an explosion. of course, we hope that it's different, you know, not that
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our colleagues, um don't deserve some kind of, um, you know, center or something for what they did, but this is way too extreme of a response for what happened. we have not seen any kind of partisan exposure like this in the house since the 18 hundreds. because you did hear among those lawmakers. there was an admission that you know they did break some of the rules. but they also said that they're trying to bring attention to some real response following that school shooting. uh are you in agreement with one of the lawmakers who said they thought it was striking that the first action after that nashville school shooting will would be to discipline the lawmakers, as opposed to promoting any real change, and that would protect school children and teachers. well you know, i'm appalled and
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disappointed by it. i'm not surprised. you know, i think one of the things that i'd love for people to understand out there is that we're living in sort of a totalitarian regime here. and we often find ourselves in situations where we're not allowed to speak on issues, and that happens a lot more in the house than in the senate. but their frustration really just kind of came to a head that day , and i think that they wanted to be able to express the angst and the pain that we were hearing from from your former guests that, um, you know, it's just prevalent. throughout this . there are thousands of people out there yelling in the hallways that they want something to be done about gun violence. do you? do you think if legislators legislatures went into the chamber with a bullhorn to protest a less polarizing issue? i mean you, you pick what kind of polarizing, less polarizing issue do you think that they too would be subjected
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to this same kind of threat of punishment? you know, fredricka . quite frankly, i think it just depends on whether there is an r d after their name. hmm. you think it's strictly it's strictly politics. i really do. i think this is very political, you know, initially, when this happened, we had a little bit of an inkling that the that the controlling party and they wanted to do something about common sense gun regulations, but that has obviously been overtaken by this situation. and i'm i don't think that they're necessarily upset about that because i think they were in a position where they really did not want to go against the tennessee firearms association in the nra, and this is a good distraction. hmm um, we're watching live pictures now unclear what's being said right there in the chamber. but you know, you represent a lot of the families who sent their children
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to covenant school. how is your community doing? what are they saying about what is bubbling up here at the state capital. we will continue. well, first of all, i mean, our police and then the covenant community just did an amazing job of helping families and continue to do a great job of supporting our families through this. what i see our communities galvanizing . i've been to many house meetings where people are determined to do something about this. um and i hope that we have unlike we've had in past school shootings commitment in the resolved to make this last longer than this news cycle. hmm. alright tennessee state senator heidi campbell. thank you so much, and you're not going to be too far away because we like to be able to draw upon your expertise as we continue to watch these live pictures coming from the state capital there in
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your town of nashville, tennessee, as we continue to watch and wait about whether there's a vote in which way it goes. thank you so much, senator. all right overseas. now french president emmanuel macron is discussing diplomacy on a state visit to china but back home in paris. violent protests are flaring once again over his controversial pension reform plan. union workers carrying red flares stormed the building that is home to the american investment company, black rock and hundreds more protesters toss smoke bombs and hurled paint at police officers as you see right there for 11 days now, more than 500,000 angry citizens across france have taken to the streets. protesting government plans to increase the retirement age from 62 to 64. cnn's melissa bell is in paris watching the unrest and melissa have tensions
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. calm down at all since last we saw you earlier today. things are coming to an end here. the pleasure tell you, which is where this march ended today. you can see just behind me. the riot police are trying to clear out from the square. the majority of protesters as dusk falls here over paris have been a number of fires lit on this square over the course of the last hour, many of them now put out but now their aim is to really get the protesters to go home in the hope that that will put an end. to some of the skirmishes that we thought throughout the day. quite a lot of tear gas still hanging heavy over this square, but they're hoping that at this stage the protesters are going to go home. what we have just heard fredricka is that this is not over. beyond today's protest. this is what tends to happen at the end of the big days of protesting strikes, unions announced the next day will be we now know that the next day will be next thursday, just tonight before the constitutional council rules on the constitutionality of this particular reform their plan, they're going to try and get
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that half million people as they did today, out on the streets of france, and what we've seen over the course of the last few weeks is really a lot more aggressive action on the part of some of the protesters as they try and make their anger known every inch closer. we get to this reform becoming law. you see these protests get a little bit more tense, a little bit more violent, even if the numbers of people on the street were down compared to last time, a lot of determination and determination out there at a lot fredricka of anger targeted the police and targeted at the person of the french president himself. there was something that was very apparent here on the size today, great deal of anger about the pension reform, but really a lot of that anger also fueled by inflation, the cost of living people out there really determined to carry on making that displeasure known federica all right, melissa bell. we'll check back with you there in paris. all right. joining me right now is katherine porter and your times correspondent based in paris. so good to see you, catherine. so, reportedly paris. rat catchers are among the protesters trying to get the
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government's attention by throwing rat cadavers at city hall. meantime talks between trade union leaders and the prime minister with you know, brooke, with no resolution. is it strictly raising the retirement age, which is at issue or is there something else? um i would say there's two things one is the base issue of raising the retirement age. french people don't like it. they don't think that they were consulted enough. they don't believe they voted for their president to do this, um, they have much more appreciation for a work life balance than i think most north americans do and it's incredibly unpopular, but also the second. um i think wrong of people's anger is how it was done. this bill was introduced. there was shortened debate in both houses. it passed through the senate and never passed through. vote through the lower,
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more powerful house, and in the end, the government thought that it could realize they didn't have the votes to pass it through the lower house and instead used a constitutional tool to push it through. many people think that while the constitution allows for that it was deeply undemocratic. they think that this is a reflection of a government that is tone deaf, completely deaf doesn't listen to the people. um and they fear that it's a sliding some slippery slope towards a more or autocratic government. so there's two things going on. um it started as your reporter melissa talked, you said as a protest against the bill, and now it's party started to focus on the government in the form of the president, emmanuel macron. right alright, skipping those layers that the citizens would have much more appreciated at at a minimum. katherine porter, thanks so much. escalating
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tensions in the middle east. dozens of rockets are fired from lebanon towards israel. we're live from jerusalem next and new cnn polling offers a stark reality check for president biden ahead what voters are saying about his performance so far, and the question of deserving four more years. all across the country. people arere working hard to build a better future, so we're hard at work, helping them achieve financial freedom. . we're proud to serve people everywhere. and investing for the retirement. they envision from the plains to the coasts. we help americans invest for their future. and help communities thrive. invested in the future of americans. blackrock. if you were easy, everyone wouldo it as well as true green. does it true greens online tools, help ensure your
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audience for your published book produced an audiobook. we handle narration, production and digital distribution 38559. all right. welcome back america's critical ally, israel experienced an attack today, the kind not seen in 17 years, and it's all happening during holy week for both jews and muslims, passover and ramadan 34 rockets were fired from lebanon, a camera capture the trail of several through the sky. right, right. the talks about oh, and you can see it and hear it. that rocket was intercepted along with most of the others, according to the israeli defense forces, but they say five of them did land. and i'm talking about it, and i'm still shaking because it said. children not supposed to see this in this age
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desiring i decided. i hear the boom. i was in my home. it was very, very scary. israel has now closed its northern airspace, no deaths and so far no specific group is claiming responsibility , but no doubt many are pointing to israeli police storming the al aqsa mosque in jerusalem wednesday for triggering today's attack. hundreds of palestinians were arrested. videos show worshippers beaten elliott godkin is in jerusalem for us. so elliot, how is israel going to respond to these rockets fired from lebanon? fredricka this is something that israel is chewing over right now, as we speak. the security cabinet is meeting this evening, which defense minister yoav galant has the same defense minister that was supposedly fired about a week ago but wasn't really apparently fired. he will. we are expecting to present the options to the cabinet so that
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it can make a decision. on how to respond. now we already have heard from the defense minister , saying that he's instructed the defense establishment to prepare in his words for all possible responses, and israeli defense officials have also been telling us that israel will decide in its words on the place and time of its response. now the important thing here is that israel believes that it was either hamas or islamic jihad that fired these rockets and mortars from lebanon towards israel. in other words, it wasn't hezbollah. the militant group backed by iran, which holds sway in southern lebanon, so that should mean that israel will probably be likely to retaliate when it does retaliate against the positions where those rockets and mortars were fired from or towards assets belonging to palestinian groups in southern lebanon, not hezbollah, because i think what this also shows is that hezbollah doesn't seem to want a
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major escalation. certainly not of the thought that we haven't seen since 2006 and israel would much rather deal with palestinian militants in southern lebanon and hezbollah as well because hezbollah, of course, is much more heavily armed than hamas in the gaza strip and would make any conflagration that much more serious, but we've heard calls the com from the united nations from the government of lebanon as well, saying that it's clean or maintaining calm and stability. on the border with israel, but i think it would be incredibly surprising if israel does not retaliate in some shape or form and that is something that they will be mulling over and discussing right now. this evening at the meeting of the cabinet, fredricka alright, elliott godkin, thank you so much. alright joining me right now is aaron david miller, who helped lead middle east negotiations for decades under both democratic and republican administrations, and he's now a senior fellow at the carnegie and how mint for international
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peace, erin, so great to see you. so you just heard, elliot say, you know it's likely that israel will retaliate. in what way do you think that will happen? um fred first thanks for having me. yeah i think elliot spot on the israelis are not looking and neither are hizbollah for a major confrontation and escalation over the israeli lebanese border . these are the first rockets fired since the 06 operation which shut down the northern half of israel. for 30 days and resulted in 160 plus is really desks and over 1212 100 plus lebanese killed as well, so i think the israelis will respond . there's also the option of responding in gaza. how nice militants have responded with rockets in the wake of israeli palestinian clashes and confrontations on the haram sharif temple mount. it is ramadan. as you pointed out, it is passover, fred. and this is not unusual. religious sensibilities are heightened and tensions were expected during this period. so erin that the
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rockets coming from lebanon is a response to israeli police storming the al aqsa mosque in jerusalem. um is there any acknowledgement you know, from israel for doing so in that manner? and why does lebanon feel like this is the best way to respond? well it's results, not lebanon. fred this responding so much this palestinian groups in lebanon and senior hamas official was in beirut. the real question, i think on the lebanese picture inside of the story is to what extent hezbollah had for knowledge of this operation and acquiesced in it. it clearly is a response to the israeli police storming the alaska moth. uh again, israeli extremists were threatening to sacrifice a goat , um, as would have been traditional in the days of the
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of the temple on the harmless reef temple mount, which produced a palestinian response , and the israelis responded to that, so i think the palestinians want to show a measure of solidarity. it is unusual, however, that is palestinian groups in lebanon that have chosen to respond. and even though i think middle east wars do not happen by accident there, usually preceded by a train of trail of escalation. actually reaction. it is concerning that the fire came from limit on the last thing that the region needs is a major escalation involving as bowlers 100,000 plus hydrogen torri weapons and what is likely to be a very, very tough response not just against hizbollah but against lebanese infrastructure and the part of the israelis. but we did hear from elliott that the belief was this may be a response from her, not hamas, but not necessary hezbollah. so
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do you think there is a way in which israel can deescalate any of this? well it's going to take two to tango here and remember, you have a situation in israel against the backdrop of months of demonstrations and protests, including hundreds, if not thousands of israeli military reservists, which is which are in precedent, and those reserves, by the way, are important. since israel hasn't fought a ground war in quite some time. it is the reserves in the air force and in the intelligence that, in fact would be ready for this sort of operation. so i think even though some would argue it's a sort of wag the dog potential possibility with israeli prime minister who is burdened with a domestic crisis might seek response. a broad. i don't think that's the case. i think the prime minister and his security establishment and the israeli
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military establishment understands the dangers and the risks that could result if, in fact you have a full blown escalation and confrontation as we saw in the summer of 2006 between israel hezbollah, matt, my gut tells me, fred, that this is going to calm down, at least on the lebanese piece of it after the israelis were respond , and they've already signaled their diplomatic establishments and have their talking points to expect that they are going to respond. all right. we'll leave it there for now. aaron david miller. always great to see you. thanks so much. right? all right back in this country. weekly jobless claims came in higher than expected ahead of tomorrow's crucial jobs. report what this all means for your bottom line and a doctor's donations set off a chain of events that ends up saving, not one but two lives. that incredible story straight ahead.
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, snacks and sweets to families all around the country. knots dot com. enjoy free shipping on your first order, larrionda vogue at the supreme court, and this is cnn. alright as the country grapples with historic inflation. one area that has remained sound is the labor market, but job cuts are mounting, bringing added attention to tomorrow's jobs. report. one chief economist says we're at a tipping point. now the march jobs report will be the last monthly employment snapshot before the feds next policy meeting at the beginning of may. and we have new cnn polling revealing how voters feel about president biden and the job that he's doing. the numbers are sobering for the president as he considers a reelection bid. cnn's political director, david chalian, is here with more on the numbers, david
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so let's begin on reelection. what do voters think about that? yeah fred, we asked that basic question. does president biden deserve reelection? does he deserve another four years? take a look at this. just a third of the americans polled in this survey 32% to be exact. say yes, 67% nearly two thirds of americans does not believe that he deserves reelection. and look , if you look over time, we asked this question just back in december, and the president is ticking in the wrong direction. there you see he was at 37% yes, deserving real. election but now he's down to 32% so he's a tick down from where he was in december, fred mm. and so when it comes to his approval ratings is that in step with what we just saw yeah, i mean he's overall approval rating right now. in this poll, our brand new cnn poll is at 42% approve 57% disapprove, and if you look over
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time, it's a pretty narrow range in which biden's approval rating has fluctuated here. but what you see here in the most recent snapshots in december january, there was a bit of an up an upward trajectory after the november midterms when democrats performed better than many people anticipated. that little uptick has seemed to stalled out now, and he's at 42% approval today in our poll. okay and then, finally, where do voters stand on? how biden is handling certain issues and you know, and what are those issues? what attributes to you know what they like? or don't like. yeah take a look here. we tested a whole bunch of top key issues in this poll. and what i think is so interesting is he here is for the most part, fred. he performs worse on individual issues than his overall approval rating. for the most part, so immigration is way down at 35% approval. 37% for the economy, gun policy. you see here, environmental policy and national security are the
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two areas where he's actually overperforming that overall 42% approval rating. we also looked at some key. tributes of joe biden sort of asking people about him and his best attribute is that 48% of americans in this policy, he works well with congress, but just look here he is below a majority with core attributes, like cares about people like you only 45% say he is honest and trustworthy. only 35% say, inspires confidence and 32% that same number who thinks he deserves reelection. 32. says he has the stamina and sharpness for the job, fred. alright mixed bag there. david chalian. thanks so much. alright and this just in the u. s. supreme court has just ruled on a case out of west virginia on a sports ban against transgender athletes details on that straight ahead. oaxaca is
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captioning brought to you by meso book .com. we offer a free book on mesothelioma call for the free book and receive so much more call 1 808 31 37 100. we're following breaking news out of the u. s supreme court has just ruled in a case out of west virginia on a sports ban against transgender athletes. let's bring in ariane de vogue. what's the ruling? right it's supreme court has issued an emergency order and it said it won't allow west virginia to enforce this law that bars transgender women and girls from participating in school sports teams. for now, this isn't a ruling on the merits. it's an emergency order, but the effect is that right now the state can't enforce this against a 12 year old trans girl named becky pepper jackson. she wants to
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participate in school sports and came up against this law. two justices notably dissented. that's justice samuel lido and clarence thomas. they would have ruled in west virginia's favor. what's important here is it's really the first time the court has looked at the issue of transgender sports, even in this limited way in an emergency order, but it is the first time they've looked at it. it comes as republican led states across the country are trying to pass these similar laws. so we've seen a glimpse today in this emergency. the order about how the supreme court is going to look at this issue. mhm alright , more to come. all right. thanks so much. ariana vogue appreciate that. alright right now in the u. s more than 90,000 . people are waiting for someone to donate a matching kidney thanks to this chicago kidney doctor. there are now two fewer people on that long waiting list . she did it by donating her own
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kidney to a virginia woman she had never met in an effort to show her own patients how safe the procedure is, and that's where the domino effect kicks in. cnn's elizabeth cohen is joining us right now. so elizabeth walker yes, they're exactly how all of this worked. fred it's so wonderful when this works out and this all worked out. thanks to dr alexander grammar check. she's at northwestern medicine in chicago . so let's take a look at what happened. there was a wife who needed a kidney transplant and her husband was not a match, so he wanted to donate to her. but he couldn't but dr grammar check she was a matte, so she donated to the wife and that allowed the husband who then wanted to, you know, give his kidney he gave that to another patient. so in other words, because of what the doctor did, two people were able to get a kidney transplant. let's take a listen to dr gamer chick. i have seen so many patients. that needs a kidney
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transplant. i just feel so bad for everyone of them, and i just cannot pick one just one person because my heart would break for the other one, so i just could not do that. so now this has happened. other times two other times doctors have given their kidneys to patients. sometimes even like in this case patients they don't even know fred and then elizabeth. you know you have seen firsthand. you know how amazing kidney donorship can work out in in life, and you experienced it yourself and your own life. yes in my own family. this was really amazing. 13 years ago, my mother needed a kidney and her cousin stepped up. so david david canter, retired air force colonel in the u. s air force. he gave her his kidney. and so my mother got to keep being a social worker and taking care of her clients. she
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got to help take care of her grandchildren. and thanks to him, we got her for longer. friends so sweet and thanks so much for sharing your family story. elizabeth cohen appreciate it. alright three democrats in tennessee could soon be expelled for taking part in a gun reform protests on the statehouse floor. we're following all the drama from nashville stay with us. s so nie you guys could stop by need new floors, but gary's so tight with the budget. it's actually a lot less than we thought. this is nice. it's time to love your floors. liquidators is now ella flooring right now save 10% on warproof floors. you could save hundreds for safe driving with liberty mutual customize your car insurance. so you onl pay for what you need. who gotta go again for what you need. liberty liberty, liberty. why did we choose safely? we were
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one of his favorite courses. cnn sports analyst christine brennan is in augusta. so christine so far, how's he doing? fredricka is actually making a charge right at the end of his round. he has birdied the last two holes that was 15 and 16 got two more holes to place on 17 right now and then, of course finishes at 18. he's one over par. at one point, he was three over power. he has looked frustrated. the perspiration. it's a hot day out here. he's been sweating through his shirt. he just hasn't looked settled, but it's been almost two months since he played around of golf, a competitive round in los angeles on the pga tour. so he's looked rusty and the iron play hasn't been as good. the pots have been short everything that we know about tiger and that so many fans love the ability to just kind of just , you know, take the momentum and run with it. he had no momentum until the last 20 minutes or so. birdie birdie tiger could even maybe birdie
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one more to get back to even power, which would be which would be a very good start for him on a tough day. nice alright , tiger back on the prowl. we like to see that. all right. so christina also want to ask you the heels of the most viewed in a women's basketball national championship game. you know, it's not the final shots or the fact that l s u s win over iowa was, you know women's basketball reaching heights at a whole new level, you know, it's also about the first lady now walking back that hosting the runner up team idea. so you know, on this anniversary year of title nine. how do you see this kind of elevated attention impacting the already fierce female athletes that we are seeing. fredricka i think the controversy actually is a very good thing. people here we are thursday. the masters is going on right behind me, and we're talking about women's basketball. that is fantastic. i mean, that that is wonderful controversy can be
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great. the conversation the national conversation. you and i have talked for a long time about how sports takes us to important conversations. this has racism. this has sexism. this has everything. i'm not saying all that is good all the time. but if we are talking about these things that can be a positive and yes, as far as dr jill biden. i think she got very excited after watching that tremendous l s u iowa game else you is that the national champs katelyn polantz, the record breaking tournament, and i think she just thought hey, let's have them all come to the white house. clearly she's walked that back. l s u is going and katelyn polantz has said herself. she goes. that's the way it should be. yeah i mean, i guess that was the teacher in jill biden saying, come on, everybody, let's you know all get together, but you know, no, it's winners go to the white house and these athletes want to honor that tradition and stick with it. all right, christine brennan, thank you so much. alright and investigation is now
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