tv CNN This Morning CNN September 11, 2023 3:00am-4:01am PDT
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all morning long. we begin with this right now president biden is heading back to the united states from the g20 summit and a stop in vietnam. he will mark 9/11 when he stops in alaska. this is our breaking news this morning. several south korean media outlets are reporting that north korean's kim jong-un appears to be on his way to russia. days after u.s. officials warned that kim and putin could meet to discuss a potential deal to supply moscow with weapons for its war in ukraine. now neither russia nor north korea have confirmed that meeting. cnn international diplomatic editor nick robertson is standing by in london and paula hancocks live in seoul, south korea. paula, what are we learning at that moment? >> reporter: well, phil and poppy, what we are hearing is from south korean media reports at that point they believe that kim jong-un is in his armored
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train northeast towards russia. at this point, neither side, as you say, has actually confirmed whether or not this is the case. we are also just hearing from russian state media that vladimir putin has arrived in slad va stock for that eastern forrum held there to the eastern side of russia, which is where kim jong-un is believed to be heading. now, this is a meeting that neither washington nor seoul want to happen, but it is one that they have both predicted. we have been hearing in recent days that u.s. officialed backed up by south korean intelligence as well believe there are actively working towards an arms deal. for north korea to be able to provide russia with much-needed ammunition, for example, or small arms. something that north korea has great production capability for. in return, of course, we're hearing from u.s. officials that russia could give north korea some core nuclear and missile technology. so this is clearly a meeting that neither side, washington
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more seoul, want to see happening. it was 2019, the last time that these two leaders met. the first time they met as well when kim jong-un went to visit with vladimir putin. now, at that time there were no significant announcements, no significant developments towards a closer relationship. but certainly in recent months we have seen that change. the russian defense minister, for example, back in july, went to pyongyang and was given the red carpet treatment surrounded by a military parade and an arms expo. north korea showing off its military capabilities w. you know, nick, we heard kim jong-un over the weekend in this marking of the 75th anniversary of the nation talking about deepening ties between it and russia and it and china. can you talk to the big picture significance of what would be this meeting between putin and kim jong-un for the world? >> reporter: it would be significant because it potentially means the war in
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ukraine goes on a lot longer because what president putin needs right now is more weapons and more ammunition because they're getting used up in ukraine. it's a war of attrition. and if he wants to win, he already has his factories working 24/7 in some cases, producing weapons. north korea uses the same type of weapon systems and could be a ready and useful supplier connected to russia by land. so the implication is that this could help extent the war in ukraine, if putin is going to follow up on his defense minister's trip to north korea which did seem to be about expanding cooperation in the field of armaments. we heard just last week from dmitry peskov, the kremlin poex person, saying that russia was going to continue its relationship with north korea regardless of what other countries think. so this is a potential of
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concern because not just what north korea gets -- not just what russia gets but what north korea may get in terms of technology to help it launch satellites successfully. technology to help it build successful nuclear capable submarines. this is the sort of unintended fall out of the war in ukraine. you have these relationships deepening, as russia says, it intends to do. the content of that deepening, we don't have full visibility on. >> yeah. it's the scale of the technological transfer, i think, that really worries long-term, at least, western officials at this point. paula, nick, we'll be watching this throughout the course of the morning. thank you, guys. of course we also want to update you on what's happening in morocco. this morning, the critical 72-hour window to rescue survivors, that windows is closing fast. more than 2,100 people are already confirmed dead. and right now, search teams are in a race against time to try to save survivors who may still be
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trapped in the wide-spread devastation nearly three days after the catastrophic quake. take a look at this brand new video from our team on the ground. the situation is especially dire in remote mountain villages like this one utterly flattened, desperate families stranded without food, water, medicine. roads have been completely blocked by these landslides. this mountain village has been almost entirely wiped out. more than 100 families have lived here and now it's just a pile of rubble. our international correspondent sam kylie hit a visited hard-hit village in the foothills of the atlas mountains. watch. >> reporter: another victim buried. returned to the earth that killed when it shook. more than 2,000 people perished in the worst ma rock can earth wake in over 100 years. most of the deaths were in
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villages in the atlas mountains where homes cracked and crumbled late on friday night. the pancaking of these buildings down a side street killed 25 people, three of four are still missing, believed buried in the rubble. this is a pattern that's been repeated throughout this province. it looks very often like there's been some kind of air strike. the collapsing buildings here actually leaving holes as if they've been hit by russian bombs in ukraine. but this has been an all-too natural disaster. at least three elderly people have been entombed here in the remains of their hotel. and a fourth guest is missing. after the quake, sammy called his parents for a day and a half. it rang out until the battery died, too. >> i'm here, death, because i have lost two of my best things
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that i have in this life, my parents. my father and my mother, i have lost them here. >> reporter: his grief turns to anger at the government as it does for so many here. >> they have no planification, only they have words. it's a balloon of words. only that they have words. that's all. >> reporter: aid is arriving, but slowly. nearby, authorities tell me that 27 people were killed in the quake. and 1200 lost their homes. when they were in the house, this woman said she was in the bath when this series of explosions broke out. they said there was no shaking of the ground. she c's saying it felt like a blast from an automatic rifle. like this is a sense that the place had been hit by a war. they had no idea they were
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suffering from an earthquake. luckily for them, they evacuated their family very rapidly. nobody in their family was killed. but in the village, there was, 27 people were killed. the house is now abandoned. but she led a team lof local women to find food and shelter before any aid arrived. all the food here, the result of private donations. many villages remain isolated. roads cut by landslides. relief operations will focus on getting to them. firefighters consider searching for bodies beneath the hotel. their conclusion is disappointing. amidst shocks and shattered masonry, it's just too dangerous to rescue the dead. so for now, sammy's parents will stay buried where they are. >> so much ainge wish this morning. our sam kylie, thank you for
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that reporting. phil? now we want to turn our attention back to the search for the escaped murder, da nil low cavalcante. he stole this van and abandoned it sunday, apparently slipping past the police perimeter before heading north. he's also changed his appearance from this to this. shaving his beard, cutting his hair and now wearing new clothes. you see that hooded sweatshirt there. cnn's danny freeman joins us from pennsylvania. dramatic developments over the course of the last 24 hours. >> reporter: yeah, that's right, phil. the last 24 hours and last 48 hours i think the best way to characterize this right now frankly is this weekend was a major setback in the manhunt for da nil low cavalcante. he slipped that police perimeter, got his hands on a vehicle and still on the loose 12 days after escaping.
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a convicted killer still on the run and still keeping police guessing. pennsylvania state police now say cavalcante changed his appearance, shaving his face and wearing a green hooded sweatshirt. the latest sighting, more than 20 miles from long wood gardens area where police had focussed their search. cavalcante slipping through the law enforcement perimeter. >> i wish it had not happened. unfortunately there are a lot of circumstances. there are a lot of issues associated with that property. tunnels, very large drainage ditches, things that could not be secured. you couple that with weather, aviation being down for a night. >> reporter: pennsylvania state police said cavalcante got away after stealing this 2020 white ford transit van from a dairy farm saturday evening. authorities said the keys had been left inside. >> this most recent incident is a reminder that he will take advantage of any opportunity to obtain items he needs. >> reporter: police said
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cavalcante later abandoned the van in a field behind the barn. they believe it may have run out of gas. but before that, police said cavalcante attempted to meet with two possible acquaintances on saturday night. one in east pikeland around 9:52 p.m. and another in the area of phoenixville at 10:07 p.m. according to police, no one responded to meet the 34-year-old fugitive. but one of those people recorded cavalcante's visit from a doorbell camera, giving officers a glimpse of his new appearance. >> we ask for the public's help by familiarizing themselves with the updated photographs and description of cavalcante. to check security cameras they have and to call us immediately. >> reporter: 12 days ago this was the inmate crab walking to get loose caught on video. authorities are urging people to secure their homes and vehicles because they still believe cavalcante is in pennsylvania. with many encounters already reported and confirmed sightings, people in the surrounding areas are on edge.
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>> i think i will stay with my sister tonight, especially if they don't catch him. just, you never know. >> they need to bring the national guard out now. enough is enough. >> reporter: now phil, the pennsylvania state police noted it, but it's worth drilling down on it. the weather really has been challenging and will probably continue to post challenges for this manhunt. police saying at some points this weekend helicopters could not fly. rain possibly expected today as well. phil? >> weather combined with terrain and just a lot of unanswered questions. danny freeman, keep us posted. thank you. well, president biden just wrapped up his trip to vietnam. he is on his way home. right now we have the highlights of that major foreign trip ahead. and nikki haley seized on a cnn poll that shows her as the strongest gop candidate to take on president biden. what she told our own jake tapper. that's next.
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♪ as the sun comes up here in new york city in just a few minutes, you're looking at live pictures of ground zero. this is the 22nd anniversary of 9/11. president biden will be marking the day from alaska. he is headed there now after his visits to india and vietnam. this trip included the g20 summit in new delhi biden made the case that the united states is a more reliable and trustworthy partner than china but also failed to unite the group around an explicit condemnation of russia's
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invasion of ukraine. in hanoi, he visited a site of john mccain. during biden's visit, vietnam elevated the u.s. to its highest level of diplomatic ties, a comprehensive, strategic partner. biden acknowledging how far the relationship between the two nations has evolved since the vietnam war. we find our jeremy diamond who has been reporting on the entirety of the president's trip, including that press conference yesterday, jeremy. good morning to you. writ large, is this considered a success for the biden administration? >> reporter: well, certainly the president and his team feel that it was. and there's no question that the president has left hanoi vietnam with a very real, very tangible agreement to elevate that relationship between the united states and vietnam. and it's a step that has not only significance for the bilateral relationship but
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really for the administration's broader china play book. it is the latest in a series of steps that we have seen president biden and his administration taking over the last several months. we have seen the president host the leader of the philippines at the white house for the first time in over a decade. host the indian prime minister for a state dinner and have this very symbolic trilateral summit at camp david with the leaders of japan and south korea. all of those countries are china's neighbors and all of those countries are united. if not by an outright sense of alarm about china's aggressive military and economic posture in the region, then at least by a serious sense of concern and a weariness about china's behavior. and so that is the broader context within which this falls. and it is certainly significant for the broader geopolitical message. the president, though, yesterday even as he takes these actions, he wanted to send a very clear message to china, that all of these moves are not aimed at containing the country. listen.
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>> less about containing china. i don't want to contain china. i just want to make sure that we have a relationship with china that is on the up and up, squared away. but as i said, we're not looking to hurt china. sincerely. we're all better off if china does well. >> reporter: it's also very clear that there is more than just geopolitics at play here. the u.s./vietnamese relationship, $75.5 billion for boeing and vietnam airways. ft. talked about expanding semiconductor chip production here in vietnam. the president also making a symbolic stop at the john mccain memorial here in hanoi, tying together the really nearly half a century evolution of this relationship from the vietnam war to today. weren't jeremy, heavy focus on indo-pacific and ukraine essential to any of these summits. there's a difference in the language in the g20 joint
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statement pertaining to russia and ukraine from last year. what actually happened there? >> reporter: yeah, that's right. last year's statement, phil, made very clear that most of the g20 countries directly held russia responsible for that invasion of ukraine. this year's statement did not include that language and that language was carefully crafted over hundred of hours of negotiations from diplomats from all these 19 countries plus the european union. ultimately it was a decision whether to have any kind of joint leaders statement or to simply not have one at all. and so, ultimately the united states and other countries chose this more watered down language in order for there to be some kind of joint statement that nonetheless does call out any attempts to grab sovereignty, to violate another country's territorial integrity by force. the united states, jake sullivan, made this case very clearly just a couple days ago
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where he said he believes that strong statement about territorial integrity is significant and significant because it also got a number of these developing countries that have really remained neutral in this conflict to sign on board to that. the united states also didn't want india, which has hosted the summit, which put a lot of political capital into this summit to face the embarrassment of not having a joint statement at all. >> quite a response from the ukrainians, of course, to the lack of that language being in the communique this year. jeremy diamond, thanks for all your reporting throughout the weekend on this. republican presidential candidate nikki haley not mincing words about what she thinks of the current relationship. jeremy was just talking about between the u.s. and china. >> china has been practically preparing for war with us for years. yes, i view china as an enemy. how much more has to happen for biden to realize you don't send cabinet members over to china to appease them. you start getting serious with china and say we're not going to
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put up with it. >> the former south carolina governor also responding to a new cnn poll that shows her as the republican candidate posing the greatest risk to president biden. the poll shows hailey leading biden by six points in a hypothetical general election matchup. haley says it shows that americans are ready for change. >> the majority of americans know we need a new generational leader that we need to leave the negativity of the past behind us. the majority of americans don't want to see a rematch between trump and biden. that's been very clear. >> cnn's evan mckend joins us now. it now seems like this message is landing to some degree. >> reporter: yeah, good morning to you both. what we have seen ambassador haley do on the campaign trail in recent days is really seize on this cnn poll showing that in a head-to-head matchup she could possibly be best positioned to beat biden.
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she has made this argument about the need for a new generation of leadership central to her campaign. she maintain as majority of americans just don't want to see this rematch between trump and biden. and in recent days i've also heard her double down on her hawkish foreign policy positions. i'm rial curious to see if that resonates with primary voters. you know, sort of calling china the enemy because what we have seen is that populism has gained momentum, gained momentum among conservative voters. and many of them, if you speak to them, really reject this pro-war, pro-involvement posture that we've heard haley push. she still lags far behind trump in support among republican voters. though, phil and poppy. >> eva mckend, thank you for keeping an eye on the haley campaign. tennis great novak djokovic, it was an amazing night.
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number 24, his 24th grand slam title. we have that and, oh by the way, i hope you didn't miss it this weekend, this was just amazing to watch. coco gauff's big win at the u.s. open next. ernet. they have busisiness grade internet, nationwide. (vo) make the switch.h. it's your business. it's your verizon. [coughing] when caroline has s a cough she takes robitussin. so, she can have those one on ones again. hey jim! hey! can we talk about your yoga breaks? sure. get fast, powerfulough relief with robitussin, anfind your voice. ♪ robitussin ♪
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djokovic. >> novak djokovic crowned the winner of the u.s. open last night with the serbian tennis great or goat clinching his 24th grand slam title. he holds the most titles in men's tennis history. while he may be 36, he is not slowing down. >> i think it's important for ethical reasons to give a full disclosure, poppy is very biased on this issue because she was there last night to watch the win. that's poppy with her husband taking in the match. cnn's coy wire joins us now. coy, we'll watch with djokovic mostly because poppy i don't think would have it any other way. we do want to get to coco gauff. >> it's a personal thing with novak. >> what was it like seeing greatness in action. >> so full disclosure, married to serb. my husband was serbian, born over there. so they always talked about him being the gratest. this is the first time either of us had seen him play live. it was magical, remarkable in every way. what did you think?
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>> it's totally different to see it in person. >> at that level, when you see someone like that in action, it is very impressive. and this guy is 36 years old, like the energizer bunny. 24 grand slam singles title tied the great margaret court for most all time. this is against world number three medvedev who just beat alcaraz. he lost to medvedev. there's a very sweet moment after this match. he mentions -- he sees a special fan, his biggest inspiration, his littlest fan up in the stands. listen to this. >> when i was struggling the most actually, physically and being under huge tension and stress, particularly in the second set, every time i would look at my daughter, she was sitting court side, facing me, facing the bench where i was seated, she would give me a smile and a fist pump. and that would, of course, melt my heart and give me this kind
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of energy and strength and also playfulness that i needed in that moment. >> so to have his daughter there in the stands, his why, right? >> yeah. >> but i'm just so jealous of you. i've never seen him play in person, poppy. there's that big moment that sweet moment. that's what it's all about. >> the t-shirt, mamba. he thought during the tournament -- he was very close to kobe bryant. he thought a few days ago to have this shirt made, his whole family was wearing 24, of course, to mark kobe and to remember him and this -- >> one of kobe jersey numbers, 24th grand slam title. >> i want to get to the nfl in a second. yesterday was a big day and another big game tonight. i want to match coco gauff. >> go coco. >> talking about her faith, her family had the greatest quote in the history of the world. thank you to the people who didn't believe in me, those who thought they were putting water on my fire. >> she is burning bright.
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14 years old she turns pro. then last year, she's at the french open and she's in paris graduating from high school virtually. it's a dream. it's a family dream. you see her talking about her mom and dad. many congrats to coco, the first teen to win the open since her idol. >> calling out her dad, saying this is the first time my dad, who used to coach her, by the way, has cried. and he's in tears. >> usually tries to act hard and now he's not. nfl, big opening sunday. however, big game tonight with a personal tie for you. >> huge game, yes. well, it's the highly-anticipated debut of aaron rodger's four-time league mvp putting on that gang green jets helmet. but he has a tough task. they're playing against one of the greatest forces to step on a football field and that are the buffalo bills. one of my former teams i played for. it's going to be an awesome game. rodgers against an incredible defense and damar hamlin, this is his first live real game,
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regular season game since he had cardiac arrest last season. also on a monday night game, it will be highly emotional. talked to him just a bit earlier this week. it will be a very emotional game with lots of high stakes. >> high stakes. you'll be there, too? >> i will be there. >> thanks for your report, by the way, you're really great, special report on safety of football. if you didn't see it last night, everyone should tune in. >> appreciate you. lawmakers are staring down a deadline to act before the government shuts down. where the talks stand. that's ahead. and today it has been 22 years since 9/11. and 22 years later, people are still dying because of that terrorist attack. you'll hear their stories next. ♪ >> he was diagnosed with 9/11 cancer. and we talk about the fact that 9/11 not only killed uncle tommy but 20 years later killed daddy.
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illnesses. our jason carol joins us outside of one world trade center this morning with his reporting on that and to remember what they did that day, jason, is everything. >> reporter: everything. and poppy, for so many of the first responders who worked at ground zero, they have been waiting, looking at the calendar, and wondering when and if they would be added to the number of people diagnosed with post 9/11 related illnesses. poppy, over the years, that number has just continued to grow. >> i think we just miss him. he was just always present in everything we did. >> reporter: jim says not a day has gone by where he has not thought about his father. >> if you were speaking to him, you were the only person in the world he was talking to. and, he was as good as they come. >> reporter: his father, lieutenant joe brosey, a veteran of the new york city fire
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department for more than three decades, died this past february 3rd, after a long battle with stage 4 lung cancer. doctors gave him months to live after his diagnosis in 2015. he gave this moving interview to the fdny in 2019. >> nothing is impossible. just hasn't been done yet. you have to believe that you're going to beat it. if you believe it, it will happen. >> lieutenant joseph brosi, engine 88, february 3rd, 2023. [ bell ] >> reporter: brosi's name, one of 43 added to the fdny world trade center memorial wall last week, which commemorates firefighters, paramedics and civilian support staff who died from post 9/11 illnesses. it's the second largest group
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added to the memorial since it was created in 2011, when 55 names were added. the number of lives lost from post-9/11 illnesses on the wall now stands at 341, almost equally the 343 fdyn firefighters killed that day. >> that number has grown each year. and my fear is it will continue to grow. >> reporter: brosi says his father was at ground zero on 9/11 and remained working there day in and day out. so, too, was new york city firefighter daniel foley. foley pledged to stay at the site until his older brother thomas, also a city firefighter was found. foley ended up finding his brother's body, 11 days later. he continued to help with the recovery efforts for months. he died from pancreatic cancer in 2020. he was 46. >> he was diagnosed with 9/11 cancer. and we talk about the fact that
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9/11 not only killed uncle tommy but 20 years later killed daddy. >> reporter: the message from firefighters and their families years after one of the darkest days in u.s. history first responders are still suffering and dying as a result of their service. >> the other thing is it's the people who aren't dying but are sick. and they're not living, but they're alive. and no one measures that loss. >> reporter: a final note, both brosi and his brother joe are new york city firefighters who were also there on 9/11 working alongside their father. are you concerned about your hil health in terms of the future? >> i will say i -- i monitor my health very closely. i will not live my life in worry. >> reporter: brosi and his brother, as you heard him just say there, they get check-ups
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every year, poppy. again, they monitor their health every single year, watch it very, very closely. he says his brother actually does have some respiratory issues, but part of their message here is just not to forget, not to forget the service of so many first responders on that day and to remember that they continue to pay the ultimate price. poppy? >> we will never forget. and always remember. jason, it means a lot to have you there. thank you for that reporting. well, it is a critical week economic week ahead for lawmakers in the white house. the deputy secretary of the treasury department joins us live in the studio to discuss. that's next.
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visit bathfitter.com to book your free consultation. ♪ the house is back in session this week after a rather elongated break. lawmakers, though, they are staring down a looming government shutdown. the date to watch, that would be october 1st. now if lawmakers cannot come to an agreement by then, the government will shut down. that means hundreds of agencies and agency staff will all have to rely on nothing except to cease operating. cnn's lauren fox is following the latest on capitol hill. lauren, we have been through this so many times, you and i in particular, over the course of the last decade. do you feel like this time is different? are they going to find a way out of this? >> yeah, in conversations that i had, phil, over the last several days it's become clear that there is no plan right now to avert a government shutdown.
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in fact, the plan is to get lawmakers in a room when the house returns and try to see if there's a path forward among house republicans. all eyes will be on kevin mccarthy, the house speaker, who has his work cut out for him. typically when you don't have an agreement on the broader, year-long spendi ing bill, you pass a stopgap measure to make sure you get over that october 1st deadline. but even that is going to be a huge challenge for mccarthy. over the recess, he had members on his right flank signaling that they were not going to support a short-term spending bill. someone like chip roy arguing that he thought that that was something that he couldn't back unless there were a series of other writers attached to it, something that would never pass out of the senate, phil. so you already have this fight over the larger spending bill, but then you have a fight over even a stopgap measure to fund the government for a couple of weeks. now, mccarthy can always choose to put a bill on the floor, to make sure that the government
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stays funded, but he could anger those on his right flank. you're already seeing people like matt gaetz, agitating that house speaker mccarthy's time as speaker is coming to an end. those are the challenges that he has ahead and those are things you'll see over the next several days. when the house returns, they will try to pass a defense spending bill. aides told me yesterday they still don't have the votes for that. over in the senate, they are passing their bills on a bipartisan basis. which is going to make it very difficult for the house to continue to argue that they are going to be able to pass the funding bills with just republican votes when the senate is doing it on a bipartisan basis. phil? >> a lot of maneuvering. no clear path forward. 19 days. don't be in a rush or anything. lauren fox, thank you as always, my friend. the american flag has been unfurled to honor those fallen.
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lloyd austin and the chairman of the joints chief of staff mark milliwill host a ceremony at the 9/11 memorial to honor those killed on the attack on the pentagon. ceremony is only open to family members of the victims. possible government shutdown, as phil said, not the only critical date on the calendar that could affect the american economy and your bottom line. this week, 145,000 autoworkers could describe against the big three in detroit. next week the federal reserve considers another interest rate hike and starting next month, 44 million americans are going to have to start repaying those student loans. a lot of moving pieces here. but president biden is pitching the public on a strong economy and embracing the term bidenomics. however, a new cnn poll shows 58% of americans think the president's policies have made economic conditions worse. we are happy to be joined in studio this morning by the deputy treasury secretary wally odd yam moe. thank you for being here. nice to have you in person. >> thank you for having me. great to be in person.
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>> can you respond to that poll and how americans feel. only 24% say the economy has gotten under biden. are the american people wrong? >> let me start to say that today is 9/11. we will never forget what happened. and our hearts go out to the family members that were lost but also to the talented men and women of the united states who defended them. turning to the economy, over the last two years you have seen americans start 10.5 million small businesses. which is record number. one fourth of those are latino businesses. we created hundreds of thousands of jobs. the economy is moving in the right direction, especially when you look at our competitors internationally and the g7, the u.s. economy is doing far better. but it's important to remember where we're coming from. we faced a pandemic that had global repercussions. the american people are still recovering from that. but as we recover from that, what we know is the american economy is doing better than any other economy in the world. we're creating hundreds of
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thousands of jobs. inflation is coming down. our economy is growing. investments are being made here in the united states. when i travel around the world as part of my job, companies around the world keep telling me that the place where they want to make investments is here in america, and that's proving to be true. >> to the question of how american people actually feel, are they wrong? do you believe the data is what they're misunderstanding? where is the disconnect? >> what we're seeing is that the american people are still recovering from covid, still recovering from what has been a historically tough time in terms of a pandemic that cost lives and also set us back. but today, as we recover from covid, we see american family's wealth return to pre-covid levels. job creation at historic levels and the economy come back and inflation come down. what we're saying is there is more work to do. we're committed to doing that work and america is further along in doing that work than any economy in the world and
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that's because of the grit and determination of the american people. but also because of the policies of the president. >> there's real economic concern obviously about what -- within china about what's happening to the chinese economy right now. president biden talked about this a little bit yesterday at that press conference in hanoi. here is what he said. >> not a criticism, it's an observation. he has his hands full right now. he has overwhelming issues, one of the major economic tenants of his plan isn't working at all right now. >> talking about president xi. he called the situation a, quote, particular crisis that they are having right now. how troubled is the chinese economy right now? >> poppy, i think this comes down to the choices we made. we made choices to invest in the american people, invest in the american economy and that's why the american economy -- >> i know. i'm asking about china. >> they faces head winds today. >> how great are they? how great are those head winds.
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>> they have significant head winds. they have resources to deal with the short-term. youth unemployment. the thing we have to worry about is the long-term in china they have structural channels as well. demographics, high debt and those will be far harder to deal with over time. slowing chinese economy will have an impact but mostly on their neighbors. >> okay. we heard secretary yellen, treasury secretary, say that the chinese have, quote, quite a bit of policy space if they decide it's necessary to use it. is your view that china is the biggest risk to the u.s. economy? you said mostly on their neighbors. you don't sound worried about the impact here. we saw their iphone decision, for example. >> one of the things china does is they make particular decisions that may have impacts on selective companies. when you look at the chinese economy, the u.s. has some exposure but it's limited. >> i do want to give you a chance to respond to what
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republican presidential nikki haley said. she views china as an enemy and criticized the biden administration approach to china. here she is. >> i mean, how much more has to happen for biden to realize you don't send cabinet members over to china to appease them. you start getting serious with china and say we're not going to put up with it. they keep sending different cabinet officials over, jake. it's embarrassing. >> treasury secretary yellen was just there in july. your response to nikki haley's criticism? >> it's important for us to talk to china. the second biggest economy in the world. we want to understand what the chinese are doing. as i said, china's economy has an impact on their neighbors but also on europe and the global economy. it's important for us to continue to talk to them. the secretary sent a clear message, america will do what's in its national interest. we look forward to working with china when that's in american national interest and holding them accountable to actions that hurt our economy. >> i would be remiss if i did not ask you what will happen this week with the united
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autoworkers. maybe over 140,000 auto workers striking against all three big automakers. the president said he doesn't think it's going to happen. we're four days from a potential strike. is that still the belief of the biden administration? >> it is the belief of the biden administration. the auto companies and the unions are working from position of strength. when i was last in government during the financial crisis they were in a very different position. today they're talking about how they can distribute profits and earnings in order to make sure that their companies can continue to grow and we look forward to them reaching a resolution. >> no strike. yep. that's where the president is. >> i appreciate your time. please come back. >> thank you for having me. >> thank you very much. phil? >> this week we could geld more insight when former president trump will go on trial in the georgia elections subversion case. we'll have details. ststay with us.
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