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tv   CNN This Morning  CNN  February 23, 2024 3:00am-4:00am PST

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one, but the talks brings raining right now is the anger over the uniform changes. so nike in fanatics are making them now. players and fans have not been very happy with the way the names and numbers look on the back but another complaint is the pants are kind of see-through. may tweak baseball. nike bose say they're going to use player input to the uniforms and make some changes before opening day. but kasie, you know, you don't want see-through pants out there >> is sure. don't. >> this is a family game and it's a family game. >> all right? >> thank you very much andie have a wonderful weekend >> all right. before we go here, i have some exciting news to share beginning on monday, my show will formally become cnn this morning with kasie hunt. we're going to expand these hours from 05:00 a.m. to 07:00 a.m. eastern on both cnn and cnn max. i want to say thank you, too. who these small, incredibly scrappy and mighty team that has gotten this show on the air over the course of the last 12 years and
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for welcoming the air every day. i'm also very hope that you'll stick around as we start this new adventure. in the meantime, have a great weekend, don't go anywhere cnn this morning starts right now >> good friday morning, everyone. so glad you're with us. i'm poppy harlow with phil mattingly in new york. the controversy over ivf injecting a new political debate in the 2024 campaign. what president biden i missing and what donald trump is not. >> also today, the biden administration is set to punish vladimir putin for the death of alexey navalny, new reporting ahead on the scope of a new sanctions package, including ones directly targeting the russian president. and we are so bad. >> the >> us touching down on the moon for the first time in more than 50 years. how it all happened
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and what's next for them? mission senior this morning starts right now >> well, the impact of alabama is unprecedented. court ruling that frozen embryos are indeed children that is reverberating across the country between this morning and it is opening up a new front in the 2024 election. and the battle over reproductive rights. president biden is seizing on the issue and blaming donald trump after at least three fertility clinics in the state has halted their ivf treatments. biden telling voters, quote, make no mistake. this is because donald trump overturned roe versus wade. >> know as for trump or the trump campaign, he's been silent on the new alabama decision, but one of his closest allies on capitol hill person matt gaetz, underscoring the political complexity here, republicans are facing the alabama law, needs to change because the republican party cannot be the party against
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family formation. something is totally wrong. the people who want to have a family should have the government and the law on their side. and the notion that discarded embryos in an ivf somehow turn these people who want children and want families and want the american dream into criminals is really wrong >> we have our outstanding political team standing by, but let's begin with isa belrus solace in birmingham, alabama. isabel, you've been covering this every single day this week, medical experts warning this ruling could have ripple effects of beyond just alabama phil poppy. >> good morning to you. already, a religious group is using this alabama ruling as precedent to target abortion rights in florida, here in alabama, this ruling has sent the fertility industry into a state of chaos and panic and fear. gabby coy she got the phone call yesterday from her provider, alabama fertility right here telling her that she would not be able to complete her ivf journey days after the
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alabama supreme court ruled frozen embryos have the same rights as children under state law. more fertility centers in the state. now up to three, continued to announce. they will hold most ivf treatments. alabama fertility specialist called the decision and impossible one mile, the ceo of infirmary health said statement. we understand the burden this places on deserving families who want to bring babies into this world and who have no alternative options for conceiving at least one facility in alabama. now, planning to send frozen embryos out of >> the ruling is quite the motivation to move embryos from in-house to outside off-site storage facility. >> the legal fallout becoming a harsh reality for gabby and spencer godel. >> i think it was absolutely my worst fear hours ago, the couple received the news from their fertility clinic that they can no longer proceed with their planned ivf treatment. >> i've gone through through
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miscarriages and honestly felt like a very similar feeling. >> the couple has been trying to become parents for years and they began the ivf process in alabama. >> this is all my medication >> a difficult process that doesn't always yield results showing us that dozens of medications and daily injections required in the process now the couple expects to go into debt to routinely flight to texas. all in hopes of salvaging their shot at a successful pregnancy. >> so i will go and get my monitoring appointment done and they will do the egg retrieval and texas will now serve my embryos. it doesn't feel very supported here and now they're just going to make it less accessible, more expensive. they're taking away people's chances, women's stance to have children. >> the political implications of the alabama decision. now playing out on the campaign trail, president biden issuing a statement saying make no mistake. this is a direct result of the overturning of roe v. wade, vice president
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kamala harris, echoing that sentiment at a reproductive freedom forum in michigan today, blaming former president donald trump when you look at the fact that the previous president, united states was clear in his intention to hand pick three supreme court justices who would overturn the protections of roe v wade. and he did it and that's what not us to this point today >> meanwhile, republican presidential candidate nikki haley continuing to tow a fine line and the abortion debate when she spoke to cnn, this is incredibly personal to me because i had both of my children with fertility. i personally believe an embryo was a baby, not everybody he's going to agree that an embryo was a baby, but that's why parents need to be able to have the decision on how they're going to handle those embryos and they need to know that they're going to be protected >> there is so much legal uncertainty swirling around the
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fertility clinics. they don't have the answers. patients certainly don't have the answers here so we reached out to the state attorney general's office who told us they have not issued any guidance on this matter, and then they did not respond to specific questions we ask them about whether the state, with charge someone who destroyed embryos with a crime, poppy, >> isabel. thank you. you're reporting on this has been exceptional and now you're there on the ground that means right, that the clinic behind you in those clinics don't even know legally what they're supposed to do with the embryos. they're holding. >> right now right and that's exactly why three of them of seven clinics at least. so we know of have pause right? so they can get their bearings and understand the legal repercussions here. and i do also want to let you know that patients are holding out hope for this house bill alabama hospital to 25, that the democrats introduce declaring that fertilized human and you're human embryos outside of a human uterus is not an unborn child that would offer them the protections that they need to continue on with ivf
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treatments. so they're keeping a very close eye here on the next steps. >> interesting. thank you very much with us now strategic communications expert and former republican strategist and pollster lee carter, basil smikle, democratic strategist former executive director the new york state democratic party and cnn political commentator and spectrum news political anchor, errol louis, guys, thanks so much for joining us this morning. leona's are with you because oftentimes in debates like this, particularly heading into an election season, people pull on the worst-case scenarios and it seems very hyperbolic. and most of it is, it's probably not tethered to reality. the post roe universe has proven a lot of the concerns, a lot of the fears, a lot of the warnings accurate. and i think this is driven it to a whole another level, and i'm wondering when you look at numbers to the extent we have in a given this just happened, what kind of effect does this have for the slice of voters, for the slice of people that both campaigns know they need to win >> well, i think it has a huge impact because this has now become more personal. this is
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no longer just about abortion, this is about women men, and families who are trying to create families. i mean, i don't often agree with matt gaetz, but there he was he's like we can't be the party. that's against family formation and republicans can afford that now, there's some statistics here that are really important to understand 8.10 republicans actually support ivf and believe in it. and so now you've got something that they have to they're going to have to really wrestle to the ground. and when you look at already, we had a big faction of voters who are going to say, i want to vote on women's rights, 7.10 independent women's have one of the primary reason that they're going to go the polls is because of abortion, 9.10 democratic goodman and say that that's going to drive them to the polls. i think you're gonna see that even increase. and there was a huge fraction of younger republican women who are saying that abortion was important to them to now this is becoming even more personal especially as there's more and more awareness of how many women including myself, have gone through fertility and would not have families otherwise, this is incredibly personal and this is incredibly
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important. and i think it should be a big, big problem for republicans. and i think it was very notable that last night when donald trump was talking to the christian broadcasters, he did not address this because he knows it's that much of a lightning rod. >> errol, can you help explain to people the through line here to abortion in roe versus wade, because what isabelle said at the beginning, there was really important that one religion just group and florida is now using this alabama supreme court decision as precedent to make their argument in an on an abortion issue. can you explain here the tie that president biden made directly to roe? >> sure. we'll look be the statute that was at issue in the alabama case was a wrongful death statute. and so this was a question of it had dropped and dropped embryos. and so if you read the opinion, it's unbelievably unbelievably. it's startlingly stern saying it doesn't matter whether there's been implantation, it doesn't matter whether there's cryogenic freezing. this, they're all children. they're all gonna be treated as humans at everything follows from that. and that is the lie hi jake, and that has always been the logic of trying to
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overturn roe versus wade. >> this >> is a social movement. it's lasted for decades. and what happens to social movements when they succeed, i think is what we're seeing play out here. that's a different way of what president biden was talking about when a movement succeeds, it either goes out of business or the extremists, which is what i think we see in this case. they continue with the logic. they want to relive the victory. they want to sort of move things forward and you take the very next step and you get this sort of chamber of horrors where all of a sudden things that really were not entirely meant as actual policy to be played out are the logical extension of doing away with abortion. if you if you can't, if you're saying that from the moment of fertilization, this is an entity that now has all of the rights of a child all kinds of absurdities are going to flow from it. and this won't be the last one. yeah. because roe said viability could be a game-changer all the way to
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fertilization bezel, when you talk to other democrats and they look at how this has all played out. i think politically all of them say a, it's exactly what we told you. he's going to happen. and b, they see an advantage here but given the personal nature of this the stories that you can hear, every family know somebody or has somebody inside the family. how do you navigate this in terms of the message, the politics here, knowing how deeply personal this is >> our, you know, i think to errol's point, as he talks about social movements, my mentor used to tell me every movement becomes an institution meaning that at some point, right, all of this does to your point is not hyperbole and it's not hypothetical. there are real policies that emanate from this real people and families that are impacted. it's certainly cuts along race and class. and i think over time right after weight is we start right after the overturn of wade because we started to see he all these draconian measures in different states start to pop up. >> what happened? we start to see a lot of republicans start reducing the amount of conversation they had around
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this issue. they were running away from it. you saw that even in new york three with tom suozzi, was it about reproductive rights and reproductive health news about immigration. they've pivoted to that now but the point being that if you're a democrat, you talk about and hit, hit on the fact that all of these policies that you think are siloed will become nationalized if republicans take back the house, if republicans take back the senate, if you've got donald trump back in the white house, that all of these things that you think you can move from state to state to run away from guess what? it becomes national. >> and there is no running away from me only way to change it as well as mentioned in that house, bill lee is to change the law and the state. i mean, nikki haley in her interview, jake yesterday was essentially saying, like, i think the court correctly followed the law of the state the law of the state in reading of this might have to change. i'm so struck by the 8.10 number that you that's different than republicans on abortion. it's very different than republicans on abortion. other republicans and abortion
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have become more moderate over time. yes. >> it is. especially if you look at the younger voters, you look at female voters that are out there the more 40 it's almost split now. it's not quite as the slam dunk, except that the people who vote that way are strong voters there. and theseus sick and they're likely to go out there and they're very, very vocal and they're very, very loud. and so we think that that's a huge part of the republican party, but it's actually just about half we've got a lot more to get to this morning, but there are difficulty sometimes with democrats talking about abortion given some areas of the party want to go further. so i'm just want to codify roe. the president is somebody who has difficulty talking about this issue given his faith. >> this >> changes the game and you're numbers back that up. this is an issue that they are very, very comfortable making very, very clear it's hugely problematic. so certainly a lot more come on that guys stay with us, lots more to discuss with our panel new this morning as well, israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu, just in unveiled a plan for the future of gaza. what it actually calls for, that's next. >> and president biden says he will impose sanctions directly on vladmir putin for alexey navalny's death. what those
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night that according to the hamas-led palestinian health authority and prime minister benjamin netanyahu is also revealing his new plans and for post-war gaza, cnn has obtained a copy of those plans. they include a quote, complete demilitarization, as well as quote, operational freedom for the idf. there are jeremy diamond joins us live from tel-aviv with more he's talked about what that would have to look like. but he has never explicitly put it in a document. so now that we have this, what does it look like? >> yeah, that's exactly right. poppy. and really this proposal that we are seeing him lay out here is in line with many of the principles that we have heard him talk about before. but this is the first time that he has submitted this formerly to the cabinet for its review. the prime minister's office says that these principles are being submitted as a basis for discussion. but it really, it envisions israel maintaining full security control over the gaza strip in what the prime minister's office is describing
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as the medium-term, it agrees to allow the rebuilding of gaza only after the gaza strip has been demilitarize. but let's get into the details in that middle period, which has really where i think think we should zone in here. it talks about maintaining operational freedom of action in gaza, maintaining a southern closure, which effectively means control over the egypt gaza border. it also talks about maintaining what we have seen israel building over the last several weeks, which is a buffer zone effectively between the gaza strip and israel on the gaza side of the border, about a kilometer in to the gaza strip, maintaining that buffer zone as long as that is necessary and also maintaining this full security control, it also envisions demilitarizing gaza during that period. now, in terms of who would actually run day-to-day operations inside of gaza? the israeli prime minister here, not envisioning that happening on the civilian sayyed from israel. instead, talking about empowering local palestinian
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officials. ideally, those who he says would have administrative experience, but he's not providing any details about exactly who that would be. and look, it's notable that the israeli prime minister is putting this forward in particular, because the us government has been pressuring israel for so long now to actually start thinking about the day after the war, start putting its plans on paper. and also because netanyahu so far has avoided doing so in part because this could divide his government far-right members of his government wants to see israel having full control over gaza the including security, civilian control, including settlements in gaza. so it is notable that he is starting to have this discussion, but so much, of course still remains to be seen and this is going to be a long discussion process in israel. >> yeah, no question about that. jeremy diamond, great reporting. thank you. >> president biden says there will be consequences for vladmir putin after russian opposition leader alexei navalny died in prison >> state the obvious he was a man incredible courage, amazing
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how his wife and daughter are me were going to be announcing the sanger against was responsible for his death >> those sanctions will be rolled out today. the biden administration expected to impose sanctions on some 500 russian targets yesterday, but in biden met with navalny's widowed julia, a yulia, and daughter, dasha, in california, the white house says he told them, quote, alexis, legacy will carry on i'm through people across russia and around the world joining us now, former spokesperson for the us mission to the united nations, hagar chemali. thanks so much for joining us as a fellow sanctions nerd very exciting to talk about this stuff. >> just can't let you guys show >> me because people see a big number, 500 people also know that two years ago president biden said this was going to be the most it's devastating sanctions regime in the history of sanctions regimes, which is accurate. however, russia's still producing things. russia is still fighting. what, what are sanctions and what are they not in this case, right? >> there's still producing
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bread is you can have fancy metros as tucker carlson likes to note, listen the way sanctions work in generally is that they're meant to work overall a long period of time. and they are degrading russia's ability to finance its war machine. we know that they've lost thousands of pieces of equipment, military equipment do directly to sanctions. and it appears and we don't know the full package yet, but what what president biden has said and what the deputy secretary, wally adeyemo said was that these sanctions are going to target russia's military industrial complex. and these front companies and other outlets, they've placed in third combat, third countries to facilitate the import of technology and equipment for that military. what that means is when you sanction a target, they always look for ways to evade sanctions and they all do, they all do it. and so it's a little bit of a game of whack-a-mole and treasuries. o is following up to make sure they close those loopholes and it looks like that's a lot of the targets today are going to be how they circumvent those sanctions to import goods through. third countries that aren't part of the international sanctions regime
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so you've got that. and probably more companies that produce military equipment for them and things of that kind. >> what we haven't seen yet is what is getting a bit more attention now is directly seizing the 300 billion in frozen russian assets that the us that's i mean, bill browder supports a lot. he was telling phil about about it earlier. there's question of does it exceed american law? like does it exceed what we can do? there's a question about does it encourage a flight from dollar assets? but do you agree that would be the most effective deterrent for russia here >> it would be another level, but it is unprecedented total and it would be it would be a huge step. and a lot of me having worked in sanctions, yes i'm not so sure that it's it's controversial the very controversial because again, you could end up having all these other ramifications where countries don't invest in the dollar, they don't store their
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federal funds here. that is the thing that grandin's our dollar and by the way, when our dollar is that strong, it's what makes our sanctions so strong as well. so we don't want to shoot ourselves in the foot. i mean, we don't want to cut our nose despite our face. am i getting that right? yeah. because yes. thank you. because if we if we end up doing something that that's strong and undermine faith and the dollar and people stop investing in. then they start, they start investing in the euro or other, other currencies and then are sanctions whenever we impose them in general, it makes them weaker. so i wouldn't advise going that strong because and i also think that there will be some legal issues there with that. it depends if you have a new state, a new leader, and that's usually the beauty of when you freeze those assets, when you have a new leader in the country. and i don't think i'm not trying to say that putin is going to fall soon. but when you have a new leader in the country, then you can use those assets and say here, here they are. and by the way, we think that you should repatriate some to ukraine and so on, right? and you can negotiate that. but i don't think that's seizing them completely now, is i want to talk so much for so much more about this, but i do want to
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ask you about what jeremy was reporting in terms of prime minister netanyahu kind of laying out a plan for the first time. huge, unanswered questions tied to that plan, but also coming is brock reviewed cnn analyst who works for axios is reporting that he was meeting with his far-right ministers about new settlements as well i don't understand the game here. >> you know, i was when i was saying it's disappointing to hear because when he says something like pursuing having idf operations across gaza, that's occupation. and that's something that president biden and the us restriction has been very loud, that it would be against israeli occupation of gaza re-occupation of gaza. but that is what when you say that the diii-d have has have operational control there, that's what you're saying is is occupation. but at the same time, it's not that different from what bibi has been saying for awhile now, he's been saying he said it just a few weeks ago that israel needs full security control from the river for this c, right? he's, he could not have been clear with that, so it's disappointing, but he's kinda following through on what he's been laying out there publicly. the question is, how much can
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the us influence that decision making and while israel pays attention to the us perspective, and we can, we're able to change a few things israeli government has always, even when i was working with them, they go ahead with their plans. >> well, and netanyahu has not condemned what those far-right ministers have said so far as well. >> that's right. >> what we understand from this reporting from brock's reporting is that this does not rule out some sort of role for the pa, for the palestinian authority. >> what could >> that look like in a way that you think would actually be effective? and that, you know, bibi would be on board with well, until now, bibi keeps saying that a new authority ceq created and the problem with that as it would have zero legitimacy because the palsies are the ones creating this authority. the only one that has any legitimacy is the palestinian authority and i don't see why they couldn't seize control. i mean, it would be it would be difficult. i don't want to pretend. i don't want sugarcoat it they'd have to really start
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from the beginning and rebuild ministries and fire a bunch of people and put put new people there. but it would be feasible even if the land is physically separate as it is, the pa cooperates very closely with the israeli government. so you already have that relationship and that would bode well for them. >> i hagar chemali. thank you. >> in great to have you. >> well, it's been more than a half century, but we're back. >> this has >> become the first us spacecraft to land on the money since richard nixon was president, how this mission became a success that's next >> there is to hear about your father, father, mother. >> thank you. well, that's a little better. >> you have no harm, no soul receiver. >> cooper and doozy streaming exclusively on max fashion moves fast >> so we partner with verizon to take our operations to the next level with a custom private 5g network, we get more control of production, efficiencies and greater agility. >> that's enterprise
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-hey, your mom and i procreated to that song. oh, ew! i think you've said enough. why don't we just switch to xfinity like everyone else? then you would know what year it was. i know what year it is. info kit.com. is mutual physicians. mutual united states of scandal with jake tapper. sunday at nine on cnn >> well, a texas judge's decision is quite a blow for high school student darryl george and his family this morning after that, judge ruled that a houston school district correct did not violate a policy on dress codes. george was suspended from school last august over the length of his hair, despite having his locs neatly behind his ears and office shoulders his family sued the barbers hill independent school district saying that it was violating the state crown act that protects against race-based termination >> this young man should not be punished for his hair. his hair is protected by state law.
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>> if it was lonely, very lonely. you see everybody else walking around again laughing. you can't do that. it puts pressure on your shoulders. >> and that's darrell, right there saying the impact on him. lawyers for george will appeal this >> well, the odysseus lander has become the first us spacecraft to touch the moon. and more than a half century i know this was a nail-biter, but we are on the on the surface and we are transmitting. and welcome to the moon odie, that is its nickname, is upright and has been sending back lots of data. are kristin fisher has more on this really historic journey intuitive machines has just made history as the first private company to successfully land a spacecraft on >> this surface of the moon. >> welcome to the moon houston, >> odysseus has found his new home >> it's odysseus lunar lander
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is standing up right, according to the company. and is successfully transmitting data. although we're still waiting for those first few pictures. >> now, this was really a tense final few moments for this mission. just a few hours before landing intuitive machines announced that there was an issue with odysseus's navigation system. it wasn't working, but in a spectacular example of a public private partnership, it just so happened that one of odessa this uses are intuitive machines, paying customers, nasa had an experimental piece of equipment that did the exact same thing as this broken piece of navigation software engineers on earth were able to patch up a fix and allow odysseus to safely navigate that treacherous terrain on the south pole of the moon, dodging craters and boulders to find a safe space to land. and so that
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is what happened. it took a little bit longer than the company thought to communicate with the spacecraft, but it is sending back data now and this is now the first time that any american spacecraft has landed on the surface of the moon since the end of the apollo program back in 1972. so it's a win for nasa as a sponsor of this mission. >> but >> certainly a win for this texas-based company, intuitive machines. they were able to do for about $100 million. what nasa was able to do with the apollo program with a much larger budget. so some big cheers from that mission control room. >> when the landing happened. and now we get to see what odysseus can do on the surface of the moon for the next week or so. >> kristin >> fisher, cnn washington. >> so our thanks to kristen.
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our thanks. christian, love her. watch this with my kids, dreaming on nasa last night as i'm making dinner. and it was so firstly, didn't want to watch it like mom i didn't think i would say yes, i have the gallic more sucked in than i expected >> it was very exciting. and now they think it's very cool because this next step is to do it with humans again. for the first time in our lifetime. yeah, i know we're not battled managed nervous for a period of time congrats to them. >> well, donald trump and nikki haley in south carolina today ahead of tomorrow's primary, it is a big political weaken their final message to voters. that's next i've been very busy fighting and, you know, taken >> the bullets, taken the arrows, i'm taking for you and i have so honored to take cover. you have no idea. i'm being indicted for you as i >> say, i'm being indicted over and over and over at granger, we know dealing with the unexpected as part of your job
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hi. >> would you have chesley in tokyo? and this is cnn close captioning bronchi by meso book.com mesothelial. mom. it's all we do with >> local offices throughout the country on just how you get the compensation, you deserve. 800 to eight to 44, 44 donald trump. nikki haley, both of course, in south carolina this morning making their final pitches to voters ahead of >> tomorrow's republican presidential primary. haley is far behind. trump's still in the poll. she is vowing though, to stay in this race until quote, the last person votes are alayna treene joins us now, warning to you what trump's messaging last night there was a lot there on packet for us >> there was. and despite that speech coming just two days before the south carolina
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primary, trump actually spent little time attacking nikki haley and instead trained his fire on the rival that both he and his campaign are most concerned about. and that is joe biden and then i think his focus on the general election really underscores how the former president and his team view this primary. they see it as donald trump's to lose and that nikki haley is standing in the way up and being able to unite the full republican party behind him and become the presumptive republican nominee. but look, he geared his message so during last night to the crowd before him, he was speaking to a group of religious broadcasters and he argued that democrats and joe biden are persecuting christians across the country. he said that the greatest threat to the united states is not from foreign adversaries, but he said it comes from quote, within. now he also spent a lot of time during that speech talking about abortion, which is very notable because donald trump is really refrained from discussing
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abortion on the campaign trail. he's told many advisors and those close to him that he does not see the issue as a political winner, but i think given the room, given the christian audience that he was speaking to, he felt comfortable well, in doing so he touted his role in overturning roe versus wade and his stacking of the supreme court with three conservative supreme court justices. take a listen to that message. >> and i was able to bring this issue for the first time in 54 years back to the states where everybody agrees on both sides. everybody agrees that's where it should be back in the states it was so important now, phil and poppy, notably donald trump did not address the controversial supreme are alabama supreme court ruling that frozen >> embryos are children and that those who destroy them could be liable for wrongful death. it's something that i know his campaign has refrained from weighing in on despite our repeated cross for them to do so but again, i think very
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notable that he spent so much of his speech talking about abortion, just given the general election pivot that he's making and his fears that this could hurt him in november? yeah. it is really notable. alayna treene, thanks very much for the reporting. >> let's bring back our panel, errol louis lee carter and basil smikle you picked up on this as the first thing he said this morning, he didn't mention the alabama supreme court ruling last night, didn't he clearly has the political instincts of knowing that the abortion debate is difficult for republicans. also, he has plenty of results to look at him. of course, of the last couple of years that underscore that that's a demonstration of, you can't separate what he did an office use a record now? yes. in his record is the supreme court justices struck down roe versus wade. and this is all connected to that. >> there's no question about it, and it is interesting that he he, he, he engaged in the issue at all because he has said this is going to be a political loser for republicans and he knows it. and now it's going to be even harder. for him when you look at some of the data, kellyanne conway presented yesterday at 6% of
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americans support ivf, 78% of pro-lifer's support ivf, 83% of evangelicals support ivf. this is a political loser. we're talking about matt gaetz, we talked about how we talked about we can't be the party that's against family only formation. there's no question about it. i think donald trump going on and even addressing abortion last night will be used against him. that's gonna be replayed over and over again. >> but >> i think it was also notable that he didn't just talk about how democrats looked down on republicans. he acted like that we're at war with on religion. he talked about how they shame us, but he also talked about how they're coming for crosses. he was really, really aggressive in his language and may this an all-out war? and i think it's really, really dangerous language that he used, but it's actually effective in some ways and that, that is jarring as a democratic strategy just how does the biden pain capitalize on this? most right now? >> well, the two things, one
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and going back to the trump's recent language, he had one point conflated ethnic nationalism and economic nationalism. he's layered now christian nationalism on top of that and i think if you're a democrat, you're looking at this. i mean, there was some language from one of his supporters the other day saying that if we can't talk about immigration unless we talk about assimilation, mean that's really extraordinary language that i think if you're a democrat, you say, look, this is the, these are the steps towards fascism. if you don't recognize it, recognizes it and be very, very scared of it. and to the other point about ivf, what we're seeing in us this earlier, that it's personal for so many voters that i think is what it is really turned the corner for the democrats at this point in time. it's no longer an intellectual exercise. what happens if we overturn roe you're seeing it play out dated day in and day out. it's affecting the average voter now, that's not just certain segments of population. the average voter. and i think
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that's the, that's the line that republicans are going to walk from now until election day, that this is, this is if you want good policy and good governance and you don't want to stay away from dramatic policy see making and draconian policy making, we can still steady the ship here. >> errol the lines of the general election. i've have clearly formed or started to harden over the course of the last several weeks. but there's still primary then south carolina was supposed to be the be-all and i know it's been a couple of weeks and people mind forgotten that they're still in a republican primary right now. nikki haley's still in its her home state. we know what the polling says. >> what are we watching tomorrow night >> well, what i'm going to be watching for is look, nikki haley has a case to make against donald trump, even if she wasn't there, the case would still have to be addressed, which is that? he's got a ton of legal problems he's got a ton of financial problems, not just his personally, but his campaign has been really anemic and is getting blown out by the democratic adversaries
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>> and he's >> got no ability or has shown no ability to expand his base that's just that's the problem. those are the three problems that he's got to deal with, whether nikki haley italy voices them or not. so i'm going to be listening for how effectively she voices those concerns. what she says about how far she intends to take it does she want to bring those concerns to the convention? is she going to stop after super tuesday? is she going to stop at all? does she think that one of those could be one or some combination of those problems? >> oh >> create a knockout blow. in which case she might step forward. she's always talking about these polls showing that she does better against joe biden and donald trump does. so i'm going to be listening to see how seriously she wants republicans to take that message and whether or not she's going to take it forward and for how long she was, she said until every last for this counted, but she said this again last night on cnn. she pointed to a poll, i think it was a marquette poll that she's 18 points ahead of biden in a hypothetical matchup saying you're next president
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is going to be a woman. she's talking about. yes, her or she's pointing to the vice president, kamala harris. i'm not going to get into that, but the point is here. she is so sure of this that donald trump cannot win in a general can she convince enough voters to close the gap enough. and south carolina where the polling is, no, why? no, no. i think she's counting on everybody is saying she's counting on donald trump being convicted. i think she's also counting on this being the foundation for 2028 so much of this i think is going to be roll tape 2028. i was the person that fought for you the whole time because she knows that voters are looking for a fighter. she's going to be looking back saying, i fought for the republican party. i fought for you. i told you all of this was going to happen, whether it's donald trump who wins or you biden. so this is actually, i think are really smart long term term play that i don't think is one that she's as calculated and focused on what's going to happen in the short term with donald trump as much as he's saying, you know what this is going to set me up really well for 2028. >> and everybody is always in the race in perpetuity until they're not exactly right.
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what she does have money and is made clear she wants to continue through super tuesday and probably longer, right, guys. thank you very much. she had having you well, us stocks they have soar to new highs and it's thanks to a company being called jet fuel for the stock market will explain next the lead with jake tapper, cnn to date for >> fashion moves fast >> so we partner with verizon to take our operations to the next level with a custom private 5g network, we get more control of production efficiencies and greater agility. that's enterprise intelligence. >> it's your vision, it's your verizon >> when did i call the filter? when i saw my gutters overflowing >> onto my porch, we filter as a permanent gutter solution. so he never have to worry about costly damage from clog gutters again, it's easiest call you can make colleague through three lethal answer today, more visit lee filter.com. >> i have moderate to severe crohn's disease now, they're sky rosie, things are looking
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why did anything so much power over the broader market? >> just blasting through expectations even before the earnings came out, goldman sachs called nvidia the most important in stock on planet earth. and clearly they have so much power they're riding this artificial intelligence wave. and we saw that in the markets yesterday, s&p closing up on a record. same thing with the dow nasdaq almost there. but for folks at home who maybe aren't familiar with the video, this is an ai chipmaker that is used just to train, train artificial intelligence. the company now valued at 2 trillion. yes, that's what the tea and profits for the company alone up 580%, just in 2023. and they are such a big maker of ai technology. 70% of all of the global ai semiconductor sale come through this one company. this is a company that's been around since 1993, but has really seen this explosion in just the last year or so. and you can see that enormous rise.
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you just see in the last day or so you see the stock spike, 16% growing by $277 billion in value. that is the largest increase in a single trading session. what does this mean for all of us? well, it really signals that don't have anybody your mind. >> when you're on it a year or two ago, but the point is that this is a really signal about the now and the future of artificial intelligence and technology also, if you're lucky enough to have a 401k, yeah, you're pretty happy right now. >> i think it's interesting that nvidia has spiked like this. i mean, you've got big competitors like intel and amd. and is it just the particular processing power of their chips? >> yeah, this because this one company in the video did so well, the companies who are in the similar space, they also took a ride on the market yesterday, just not $277 billion, quite there, but they're happy to tag along for the ride. and then of course you have microsoft which uses
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ai technology, mette, et cetera, really liking what they're seeing to they're working on their own technology. but it's great for them to be the same players in the same space. >> yeah, 580% revenue increase is good. >> i think >> alison. >> thank never day weekend to an update on the story that was breaking during our show yesterday, at&t. now explaining the cause of that widespread outage that lasted for about 12 hours. that's ahead >> money this morning brought to you buy intuit turbo tax, make your moves cow this year, i got serious about my taxes. i met with the turbotax expert because i had two full-time jobs, lawyering and miami, all my own
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