tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN July 2, 2023 11:00pm-12:00am PDT
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just ahead, holiday heatwave, tens of millions of americans face sweltering heat as they prepare for their fourth of july festivities. a u.s. military operation leaves multiple people dead and dozens injured. we are live in tel aviv. extending the olive branch, another member going to beijing hoping to mend tattered relations with china. we'll have more in a live report from hong kong.
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says it was chicago's heaviest rain event in more than 40 years. millions of people are under severe storm threats throughout the eastern u.s. on monday from mississippi to massachusetts. gusty winds and damaging hail are the main concerns. tragically, gun violence is once again overshadowing another holiday weekend in the united states. baltimore police are investigating a mass shooting that erupted saturday night at a block party. at least two people were killed, 28 others wounded. most of the victims were teenagers, some as young as 13. police believe there were multiple shooters. the city's mayor says it's a cowardly act of violence and is asking the community for help in finding those responsible.
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just past the halfway point of 2023 and the gun violence epidemic in the u.s. shows no sign of slowing down. according to the gun violence archive there, have been at least 338 reported mass shootings already this year. that's defined as four or more people injured or killed, not including the shooter. the research group counts more than 21,000 gun violence deaths this year which also includes suicides and more than 18,000 people injured. tensions are flaring once again in the west bank as israel stages what it's calling a counterterrorism operation. unverified video appears to show explosions and witnesses have reported ongoing gunfire. the palestinian health ministry
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brigade which is affiliated with islamic jihad. you mentioned the casualty figures from the palestinian ministry of health, israel saying it's killed seven militants, both with drones and also in exchanges of fire as well. israel referring to this refugee camp as a hornet's nest saying one of its other intentions as well as destroying this command center, seizing weapons, ammunitions and to prevent future attacks is in its words to remove the safe haven mentality in the mind of militants so they don't feel it is a safe or secure place to run back to after carrying out attacks or to use as a base from which to carry out attacks, israel saying there were 50 shooting attacks against israelis last year that emanated from here and 25 were killed last year, adding 19 militants fled back after
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carrying out attacks. this is an ongoing operation. israel saying it's using a battalion's worth of troops, around about 500 troops in israel as well as uavs and drone airstrikes, although no signs of helicopter gunships that we know of so far that had been used the other week for the first time in something like two decades. this very active operation, much bigger than ones we've seen in the past and it's still ongoing. >> thanks to. i want to turn to france where unrest has eased, but tensions linger after days of violent protests, that unrest sparked by tuesday's fatal police shooting of a 17-year- old of algerian descent. some 45,000 security forces remain deployed across the country as officials brace for any further flare-ups of violence. in the coming hours french
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friday night, the night before 3,900 or so, numbers trending down. saturday night was a pivot, sunday night is going to be a real test if that violence trends down. the center of paris looking down there, there's still a lot of tourists out. the sun assetting, people still enjoying the evening. there are riot cops on the streets there, but not the buzz there was, the activity that there was at the same time on saturday. over here a few more police officers here. they're getting around the city in these small vehicles. that's how they're racing around to try to stay on top of any potential protests. just looking around down here just as it's falling dark, you can see the police officers with their motorbikes. those were the high speed officers saturday night. there were police officers riding the motorbikes, riot officers sitting moving and staying on top of the rioters
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and that's what we're hearing from the government right now, still keeping the same number of officers on the streets, 45,000 police here saying they will have swift justice for any perpetrators of violence and try to stay on top and crush any outbreaks of violence. meanwhile nahel's grandmother, the young boy tragically shot and killed tuesday, his grandmother appearing for peace and calm. nic robertson, cnn paris. we are learning more about the dozens of migrants sent to los angeles from texas over the weekend. it was the second busload of migrants to the city in the past few weeks. republican governors have been sending asylum seekers to democratic-led states. >> reporter: these are 41 migrants that are tired but relieved to be here in los
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angeles. of the 41, 11 were children coming from cuba, belize, nicaragua, el salvador and others and a lot of these people i'm told knew they were coming to los angeles, a lot of them having sponsors or family members here in los angeles and also have immigration court dates here in the los angeles area.
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welcome back, everyone. janet yellen is the latest high ranking u.s. official to work on repairing strained u.s. ties with china. the u.s. treasury secretary is scheduled to travel there later this week, but things could be a bit awkward. at a political fundraiser last month, her boss, u.s. president joe biden, compared china's leader xi jinping to dictators. what is the latest on developments around janet yellen's planned visit to beijing given the current tensions between the two countries? >> reporter: beijing has clearly moved on from those comments from joe biden. this trip is very encouraging. we knew it was on the cards
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that the u.s. treasury secretary was planning to go to beijing, but it comes just two weeks after antony blinken's successful visit where he helped reestablish dialogue at a time when relations are at an all-time low. janet yellen will be heading to beijing later this week. we don't know her exact itinerary but understand she plans to meet with her chinese counterpart and other high ranking officials for what we hear will be constructive, frank conversations, but like with blinken's trip last month, officials are not expecting any significant breakthroughs. she's also not expected to meet with chinese president xi jinping. yellen has long signaled the biden administration's desire to improve communications with the chinese and really lower the temperature between the world's two largest economies, which as we know, are deeply entwined. back in april while giving testimony before congress she
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stressed the importance of maintaining ties with china and said that decoupling would be a big mistake and then last month at the paris finance summit on stage with the chinese premier she said -- and let me read to you what she said. as the world's two largest economies, we also have a responsibility to work together on global issues. it is something the world expects of us. yellen's trip comes at a time of heightened uncertainty for the global economy. china is struggling to reboot its economy post covid following a slew of poor economic data while the u.s. is trying to contain inflation and avoid going into recession. global challenges and mutual areas of concern will no doubt be on the agenda, but so, too, will the airing of grievances, lots to discuss on her three- day trip to beijing.
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>> many thanks, as always. u.s. president joe biden will be traveling overseas next week on a three-nation trip. first he will meet with the british prime minister and also king charles in the uk. then mr. biden's next two stops will be of vital sponsor as he meets with nato allies at two different summits. cnn white house reporter priscilla alvarez explains. >> reporter: the white house announced on sunday president biden will be have thing three countries next week, the united kingdom, lithuania, and finland. the president will start his trip in the united kingdom where he is set to meet king charles iii as well as the british prime minister who visited the white house last month. those high stakes meetings will later be continued for the president at the nato summit, where there is going to be discussion over ukraine and the
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ongoing war, particularly after the counteroffensive that has been launched and internal tensions in russia all looming over this summit. president biden has repeatedly talked about the strength of the nato alliance, also saying it has never been "more united," but in all these discussions the ongoing debate will loom over how and when ukraine may become part of that alliance. after that summit president biden will then go to finland where he will conclude his three-country trip. priscilla alvarez, cnn, the white house. ukraine is reporting heavy fighting along the entire eastern front with russian forces attacking several directions and making some advances, but ukrainian officials say their forces are having partial success south of bakhmut. they posted this video showing what appears to be a strike on a russian tank in the region and ukraine says it's gradually
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advancing along the southern front lines. what's the latest on these russian advances made in eastern ukraine? >> reporter: yeah, rosemary. none of these are game changing moves when we look at this counteroffensive and russia's efforts to hold it off, but this shows really the hard slog that we're seeing across hundreds of miles of front line. the ukrainian deputy defenseman saying sunday russia has been attacking in some towns to the south, a site of heavy fighting, an area russia took control of in the early months of the war and ukraine has been trying to take back with as yet no real success. russia has been making small advances there, but ukraine says it continues to make small advances around the flanks of bakhmut. it hasn't gone into the city itself yet and, of course, in the south around the key ports
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of mariupol, those areas consistent with what we assume to be the goal of cutting russia's land bridge between the donbas and crimea. we see the second aerial assault on ukraine by russia in as many days, the air force saying 17 attack drones went across the country. 13 did not hit their targets. the armed forces are saying there are 12 cruz and air defense missiles fired at ukraine, of which three shot down. we don't have information yet on the impact of the others. >> what more are you learning about dmitri medvedev's comment on russia being threatened by ukraine potentially joining nato? >> reporter: yeah. these comments coming in an article published in a pro kremlin newspaper ten days out from a nato summit that's on russia's doorstep and lithuania
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will be attended by the ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy and the u.s. president joe biden. he's really voicing what we already knew, that this war is partially fought over nato expansion. he said, "our goal is simple, to eliminate the threat of ukraine's membership in nato," though he denied this was about holding back nato as a whole. >> our thanks to clair sebastian joining us live from london. still to come, it is peak tourist season in france as violent protests have spread across the country. we hear from holidaymakers who were there. that's next. thing. so we've got to know a lot of things about a lot of things. like which mower makes the cut. the mulch that finishes the look. and picking a color that pops. you got this. we got you.
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officials in france say 157 people were detained overnight in a much calmer night following days of unrest. violent protests first broke out after tuesday's fatal police shooting of a 17-year- old who was of algerian descent. about 45,000 security forces remain deployed across the country as officials brace for any further violence. french president emanuel macron is set to meet with leaders of the upper and lower houses of parliament in the hours ahead. sunday he met with his top ministers and urged them to restore order. for more on this i'm joined now from paris by a professor of sociology of law and policing at france's national center for
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scientific research. thank you for being with us. >> hi. >> even as tensions eased sunday, tens of thousands of security forces remain deployed across the country. what should president macron be doing right now to try to restore calm and trust in the nation's police force after this tragic shooting of a 17- year-old boy of algerian descent? >> yes. the problem is on the one hand he has to improve the relation, especially the youngsters that participate to riots, and on the other hand he has in front of him a lot of politicians and police unions who are not in favor to be too lenient to these youngsters.
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we have high pressure from some police unions that want this repression be very strong and are waiting for sanctions and they are not ready to cooperate to build better relationship with the youngsters. >> as they try to find a way to restore calm, german chancellor olaf scholz says he doesn't expect france to become unstable but is watching the unrest with concern. how worried shoulded european union be about these protests and the underlying issue that triggered this violence in france? >> yes. it's a very big problem. the problem is we have single policies to rebuild a new way of policing france. the problem is president macron in different issues was always
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sending the police force to answer the demonstration and know perhaps we have reached a limit of this kind of policing because many protesters and we find yellow jackets and demonstrations. perhaps we have to think in a better way to working in our institution and perhaps the political organization of france has to be revealed, also. >> how does france get to the point where a police officer shoots a 17-year-old boy? >> the problem is that we have -- of course, we have a long tradition of bad relationship between police and the
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youngsters in these poor areas. a big problem was after the terrorist attacks in france during the year of 2015 and after and many police officers were killed in some local attacks and they were asking for more power to defend themself and to protect the population they said. the problem is that they use this new rights, these new laws were passed to answer to that demand to -- they use that to -- against small criminals or people were not respecting the rules and that's the beginning of the story. we have more and more people who are shooted by police officer because they are in their car and not stopping at fire or things like that. >> it is a rather tragic and
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the best of their trip. it is, after all, still paris. >> we checked out the news. we think it's absolutely fine. there's so many things going on in the world. if you listen to everything, you'd never travel. >> reporter: michael holmes, cnn. we'll be right back. ering the hottest deals of the seaso. so your summer is full of fun and savavings. shopop top 4th of july deals n. in-store or online. welcome friends, to the middle of everything! friends that bike together. hike together! with goats. can't wait to see whatomorrow brings, here in the middle of everything a's about to learn her fear of missing out leadto overeating. i totally eat stuff to not miss out. and that's just a bit of psychology eva learned from noom weight. sign up now at noom.com
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june was a big month for stocks. in fact, the s&p 500 rallied for the first half of this year, but what can we expect in the second half? cnn chief business correspondent christine romans has details. >> reporter: the stock market has shown resilience after that awful 2022 as we wrap up the first half of the year for wall street here. the nasdaq is up nearly 30% so far this year. that's the best first half since 1983. wall street also got some encouraging news on the inflation front. the fed's preferred inflation
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gauge cooled last month hitting its lowest level in more than two years and the u.s. economy grew faster than estimates, expanding at an annual pace of 2% per quarter. the job market is resilient with unemployment claims reporting the biggest drop in 20 months. despite this optimistic news, inflation is still above the fed's 2% target. jerome powell reiterated the rate hike campaign is set to resume after a june pause. it's a short week on wall street. u.s. markets are closed tuesday for july 4th. after reopening we'll get minutes from the fed's june meeting, jobless claims and the critical june jobs report. an afternoon at a small town bar in new england turned to horror sunday. dozens of people were injured when an suv crashed into the looney bin bar and grill in laconia near hampshire. the car was involved in an accident with another vehicle when it careened into the bar. 14 people were taken to the hospital. none of the injuries are said
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after seeing president joe biden's student debt forgiveness plan struck down by the u.s. supreme court, the white house is looking for ways to move forward on the issue. now the biden administration will try to provide debt relief by using existing authorities granted by federal law. looking ahead to 2024, democrats are hoping this issue as well as other recent rulings will help boost turnout for their voters, similar to how the supreme court's abortion ruling helped them in the 2022 midterms. let's bring in ron brownstein, a cnn senior political analyst and senior editor with "the atlantic." before closing out its term last week, the supreme court delivered three landmark rulings come natured by the court's conservative super majority blocking the biden administration's student loan forgiveness plan, limiting
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lgbtq protections by ruling in favor of religious objections over anti-discrimination laws and rejecting affirmative action in college admissions. transport secretary pete buttigieg says this decision will chip away at lgbtq+ rights. what is the likely political fallout from this, sir, specific ruling, do you think? >> i don't think any of these rulings will have the immediate political impact that last year's decision of the right to abortion did. that was an earthquake in american politics whose implications are still reverberating and will likely be very important in 2024, but these rulings continue the pattern we've seen as this super majority has come into place making decisions that will be enormously consequential on the fabric of american leaf and that consistently reflect the values
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and even grievances of the coalition behind the republicans who nominated them and for the most part confirm them. we are seeing a significant change in the law that is potentially just beginning given that the youngest members of this majority are only in their early 70s -- the oldest members, excuse me, are in their early 70s. it could be another decade where the u.s. is living under the decisions made by this majority, absent some big health issue, and it's very clear the direction it's heading. >> do you think the biden administration would need to consider the expansion of the supreme court as a consequence of that when you consider the ramifications of decisions like this? >> joe biden is not the president who will do that. joe biden's roots are in a very different era of american politics, elected to the senate in 1972 and someone who kind of is more of an institutionalist. i think there will be more
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discussion of that among democrats as the years go by, but i think what's more likely is serious discussion about term limits on the court, 18- year term limits. once that idea was put in place and fully implemented, every president would get two appointments in their four years at least. they would be guaranteed that. it's an idea that started among conservatives. originally it was conservative law professors talking about it. i think you'll hear more discussion of that in the years ahead. i think on court expansion there's a fear it would set off an endless cycle of escalation. all of that, any of those alternatives, is years away, and what we're seeing is this court ruling in a way that reflects the priorities and grievances of that republican coalition and often ruling
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against not only the preferences, but the intrinsic identity of younger generations who are more likely to be racially diverse, secular, identify as lgbtq. they are systematically seeing their priorities rolled over by this court majority. >> president biden received a lot of support from young voters when he initially proposed that plan to forgive some student deft, but now, of course, debt, but now the supreme court has struck that down. biden is offing a new path for student debt relief, but will it work and how important is it to biden politically he find a way to make sure that it does? >> i feel this is a dual-edged sword. biden's approval rating is quite low among young people. a significant majority of them will say in polls they think he is too old to be president and i think that this decision by the court, which i think will
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be the most politically consequential of those that they lay down over the past week, is very much a dual-edged toward for biden. on the one hand, he can point to it and say look, i tried to do this for you and republicans blocked it. on the other hand, he's already facing a kind of skepticism among younger people about whether he's really making enough progress on the things they care about and this becomes mother potentially promise he could not deliver. they are trying to find a fallback position using the higher education act of 1965 to forgive debt. there were democrats like elizabeth warren who from the beginning thought that was a better option than the authority he used. it takes a while on a regulatory matter. i suspect before the election in 2024, they will be back with another plan to relieve debt and that you will see republicans again go to court and this will be something the supreme court will decide in 2025 if the democrats still hold the white house. >> always appreciate your
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analysis, many thanks. >> thanks for having me. ron desantis' presidential campaign has shared a video slamming former president donald trump for his previous support of the lgbtq community. the video is being widely condemned as homophobic and it is the latest attack in a growing feud between the gop's top two 2024 contenders. christian holmes explains how donors and supporters feel about the video. >> reporter: when i'm talking to donors, they think that this was a weird play. they're not entirely sure why they decided to release this video. another group that is very important actually released a statement, the log cabin republicans. they call themselves the largest republican group that advocates for lgbtq and they said conservatives need to understand we need to protect our kids, preserve women sports, safeguard women spaces and strengthen parental rights, but ron desantis' extremed
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rhetoric has ventured into homophobic territory. they also said this was divisive. it's interesting to see this huge group stepping forward when they haven't in the past when you've heard so many of these candidates coming out talking about woke ideology, trying to campaign against teaching gender ideology. this clearly crossed a line for a lot of people. the u.s. has the highest maternal mortality rate of any wealthy nation. the situation is particularly dire for black women. now doulas, who are essentially birthing coaches, are trying to change all that. we will be introduced to one doula who is on a mission to save lives. >> i've seen a mom code and a mom's contractions completely stop. >> reporter: zaniya mathis has seen a lot of close calls in her four years as a birth doula. her own traumatic experience led her to choose this path.
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why are you a doula? >> maternal death rate, my own experience with delivering my twins. >> reporter: mathis didn't want another parent to have the birth experience she did or worse, become a statistic. the u.s. has the highest maternal mortality rate among high income countries with black mothers faring worst. black women are nearly three times more likely to die from pregnancy-related complications than white women according to the cdc. >> do you hope to help bring down the black maternal death rate? >> i think i'm doing it just one client at a time. >> reporter: doulas are trained birth workers. they provide physical, educational, and emotional support for their clients before, during, and after childbirth. doulas like mathis are working to address concerns specific to black mothers to be. her client is due to deliver her seventh child, but this will be her first time using a doula. >> i have learned so much from her. i just people like a whole new mother. >> reporter: while labor and
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delivery are thought to be the most dangerous time of pregnancy, studies show it's after mother and baby come home when most deaths occur. mathis says black doulas like her know how to advocate for their black clients. do you feel safer from complications or even potentially death by having a doula and also a black doula who understands the quality of care that a woman of color could get? >> absolutely. we have been looked at as we have a higher pain threshold. we've been looked at as dramatic. >> reporter: mathis knows from personal experience racial stereotypes about black women can lead to their pleas for medical help being discounted or ignored. >> it's preventible. it's systemic racism. a lot of these deaths do not have to occur. >> reporter: she's not alone in trying to get these numbers down.
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>> we really want people to move away from this fear and feel birth is joyful. >> reporter: the expo is trying to include access to care that includes eliminating the cost of hiring a doula. >> you don't have to qualify financially or have a certain insurance type. there's no barrier of entry. >> reporter: mama glow and beauty company carol's daughter teamed up to combat high black maternal mortality rates with their love delivered program. it expands access to doula services by providing grants to black families. >> if you have a doula and you're going through the process of having a child. you now have this person who is there to teach you how to advocate for yourself. >> reporter: potentially saving more lives and making childbirth a more joyful experience. >> in the black community we're told we don't need a doula. it is looked at as something as far as luxury goes. look at the numbers. look at the data. we need doulas more than any
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other race. thank you so much for your company. i'm rosemary church. i will be back with more "cnn newsroom" in just a moment. do stay with us. lowe's knows you want to make the most of your summer. that's why we're offering 4th of july deals under $100. so your summer is fufull of fun and savings. cocome in and enjoy our hottest deals now. julian's about to learn that free food is a personal eating trigger. no, it isn't. (sigh) yes, it is. and that's just a bit of psychology juli learned from noom weight. sign up now noom.com. ♪
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