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tv   CNN This Morning  CNN  August 20, 2024 3:00am-4:00am PDT

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dave's company just scored the comcast business 5-year price lock guarantee. high five! high five! -i'm in a call... it's 5 years of reliable, gig speed internet... five years of advanced security... five years of a great rate that won't change. yep, dave's feeling it. but it's only for a limited time. five years? -five years? introducing the comcast business 5-year price lock guarantee. powering 5 years of savings. powering possibilities. checkout four imprint.com for certain the lead with jake tapper today at four on cnn it's tuesday, august 20, right now on cnn this morning i want to kick us off by celebrating our incredible president joe biden night, one of the dnc is in the books with a surprise appearance
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america i love you president biden gets an ovation, gets his ovation as he marked his departure as the democratic party's leader in this because of louisiana's abortion ban, no one would confirm that i was miscarrying a reproductive rights, a central focus during night. >> one of the dnc is democrats attack the republicans on abortion and then i don't believe i am a showman. i think i'm somebody that has a lot of common sense donald trump rejecting criticism from one of his longtime allies and insists he is not a showman all right, 5:00 a.m. here in chicago, it
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is 6:00 a.m. on the east coast. >> a live look inside the united center, which is of course home of the democratic national convention here in chicago. good morning, everyone. i'm kasie hunt. it's wonderful to have you with us, events wrapped up on that stage just a few hours ago there vacuuming carpets here preparing for night to the opening night was for kamala harris, a grand entrance as the party's nominee and for joe biden there's a bittersweet exit as the party's leader your party president of the united states. >> joe he was introduced by his daughter, ashley, the president, receiving a standing ovation that lasted more than four minutes as democrats wave we love joe signs. >> they chanted. thank you joe. >> that same message was expressed by harris herself, who made a surprise appearance earlier in the night joe thank you for your historic
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leadership for your lifetime of service to our nation and for all you will continue to do, we are forever grateful to you biden, 81-years-old, he's held elected office for more than 50 years he's run for president, sought the presidency four times his speech last night was a swan song, not just for the campaign that he ended one month ago, but for a lifetime spent in american politics the work and prayers of century brought us to this day what shalom leg are legacy be what will our children say let me know in my heart well, my days or through america. america. i gave my best to you made a lot of mistakes in my career what a
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game. my best to you for 50 years, the president there quoting the song, american anthem. >> just as he did in his inaugural address, three-and-a-half years ago, biden was then and he is now the oldest president in history. >> i really been too young to be in the senate because i wasn't 30 yet and too old to stay as president what i hope you know how grateful i am to all of you we just have to remember who we are. we're the united states of america there's nothing we cannot do when we do it together all right, our panel's here, kate bedingfield, former white house communications director, bakari sellers, cnn political commentator, former south carolina state representative. >> shermichael singleton, cnn political commentator, republican strategist, and
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alyssa farah griffin, cnn political commentator theater former trump white house communications director. welcome to all of you. thank you so much for being here after a very late night. the president, not finishing until after midnight. i believe i will candidly admit i watched the end of his speech this morning but kate bedingfield, i mean, this honestly that moment where he acknowledged that he was too old to be president. i think you could honestly hear the reaction from the room that sort of inhale of, wow, he actually went there and said that would talk a little bit about what this means. you worked for this man for for quite some time. you invested a lot of yourself in him as well as did so many people when this room yeah. >> you know, the word that kept kind of reverberating with me while i was watching him last night was patriotism because we in this moment of incredibly divided partisanship in this country. >> we have really, in a lot of ways hardened into our corners. we've become incredibly
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combative and defensive and our politics and watching him last night and as somebody who worked for him for a long time and saw him up close in the way that he conduct conducts himself in public service. it was such an ode to the idea that public service is about being bigger than ourselves. and that there is reason for optimism and that people should want to participate in the process. i think and so many people look at politics today and say, why would i want any part of that? and i just thought he did such a moving job as somebody who's dedicated his life to public service. i thought he did such a moving job of making the case for the fact that working in politics is about serving something bigger than yourself. it is about country. there just aren't that many moments in our politics where somebody but he stands up and says what's best for me, the thing that i want is not what i think is best for the country. and so i'm going to take a step back and that is a huge huge selfless thing to do. so i was it was really moving it was obviously emotional for those of us who worked for him, but i think it was emotional for a lot of people who are invested
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in politics and public services let's country and i thought it was just a really powerful night i agree with kate wholeheartedly. >> i mean, i think that he put the contrast between joe biden and donald trump could not be more clear. you have someone who is clinically and egomaniac versus someone who is his selfless as joe biden i didn't really is and i thought last night began with such and i'm not sure everybody was able to see every part of the convention the conventions are sometimes for those of us who are are kind of, i get not just gluttons for punishment, but we love the politics, we love the sport, we love the ambulance he loved the science of it and all those don't say last night started with jesse jackson coming on stage and you saw two tears and people's eyes when when jesse was rolled on stage in failing health and he raised his hands raising his hands,
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yeah. and it just was that was a moving moment and you ended with a moving moment and you had many moments in between of excitement. and, you know, at the end of the day, we love joe biden so much that we gave him not only monday night, but we gave him tuesday morning as well well, i mean, you say that i will say it was so late i'm alex thompson of axios said that he got a text from someone one that the timing of the speech was awful. >> he literally set up a campaign, handed it over to them. did they have to cut him out of prime time is what he said because obviously 11, 30 is not prime time. peter baker put it this way. democrats jumbled their homage plan with a slate of speeches that went so long that mr. biden was pushed out of prime time on the east coast. he did not begin his own address well, 11:30 p.m. a. cardinal sin in modern convention planning, democrats are so far behind schedule. they had to scrap a video tribute to the outgoing president. if mr. biden minded, though he did say he cut short his own address. he had to say anyone does let me just kind of check peter baker real quick
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the first morning, early in the morning i think car is taking on the new york times on the set. yeah. no, but it's weird to me that people who were so smart and so good at their jobs create like they just mess up. >> so glaringly in peter misses the simple fact that these speeches live online for ever, like, there are clips that are playing on social media and tiktok they're not traditional means and methods by which people consume these speeches anymore. people are watching this speech on tiktok right now when they wake up, they're watching it on instagram. they're watching it on x. and so just to, just because you give a speech at 11:30 does not mean the american public has cut up. this is not 1940, where people have to gather around the radio and actually listen to it respectfully, i disagree and granted, i take biden is not donald trump. >> donald trump would be furious if he was taken out a primetime, but there is something to some of these speeches could have gone shorter and it felt like it's shortchanged some real rising stars, andy bashir had this kind of truncated speech. and for a lot of these people who have bigger aspirations, this
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is their big moment. i think. listen, he gave the remarks. i hoped he would give. i thought they were thoughtful, looking backward, but also passing the baton to kamala harris, but it was late. i also finished watching it this morning. i do want to say this though. i thought that democrats yesterday, the programming was leaning into we're a big tent party because i was working on the hill when it was pelosi versus the squad and you guys were the fractured party, but you saw hillary clinton getting a con like five-minute standing ovation. then you see aoc with a primetime speaking slot showing there's room for everyone in this party. and i thought that was very much by design. and if you look at who they have on the same day, it's meant to say there's room for the left, there's room for them for centrist wing of the democratic party, something my party, by the way, could learn something from. we didn't have romney, we didn't have ron ryan appear at our own convince well, that's also reflection of yes the president was pushed out of prime time. >> certainly agree with bakari and how people consume media. but it's also in some ways a great problem to have because what alyssa is pointing out is
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we had a vet asked array of speakers from all elements of our party who not only smoke but received rapturous applause. and it's part of the reason that the, that the program ran long was that there was so much applause and energy in the room. and so in some ways, the having the program run long because people are excited and there's so many people who need to speak is a good problem to have. >> one thing that's today that to me, of course, given that there was a union leader that spoke at the republican national convention. and because donald trump, shermichael has done a lot to appeal to working class voters in a way that the democratic party used to have a lot more sway in the union halls outside detroit than they do. we heard from shawn fain, but we also heard from alexandra ocasio-cortez, whose speech stood out, i thought in very long evening of speeches. and here's what she had to say about republican attacks on her just to give you a little bit of a taste of what her address was like. watch ever since i got elected republicans have
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attacked me by saying that i should go back to bartending but let me tell you i'm happy to any day of the week because there is nothing wrong with working for a living talk about speeches that are going to live on social media. yeah, i guess that clip will live on social media. but in terms of the democratic party uniting all of its various factions, i mean, we just saw two members of the squad lose their seat you're seeing a lot of young progressives who are protesting because they're not happy about the party he leadership's position on israel and iran and the palestinian people. and so they're are clearly some issues within the party. perhaps those issues aren't as clear as some of ours are, right. and i would i would agree with that, but to pretend that there is complete unity, i'm not sure if that's, accurate, but i want to just touch on president biden quickly here. i mean, it does
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take a certain level of magnanimity to be in a very, very powerful position and be willing to give it up and i really just hope the american people as we are in this divided time, really take the opportunity to just reflect on that i know there are a lot of differences about the president. there are differences on some of his policy positions but at the. end of the day, we do look to our leaders, kasie to give us examples of who we can be under the worst conditions. and even in the best conditions. and i think president biden has certainly exuded that as a leader certainly it is not. >> i wouldn't say kate something that we see a lot of in washington default being willing to put aside their brown ego. >> it is really not. it is a very ego-driven town and watch somebody put their ego aside and do what's best for the country or what he believes is best for the country. it is a really powerful thing. i really think it was it's an act of hope and a lot of ways. i mean, there's a lot of discussion of this is kind of like the valedictory address. this is the end of his career but i actually think there was an
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element of what he said and did last night that was so hopeful and it was so much about the future and was about demonstrating that you can as shermichael said, be in a position of power and make a choice that you believe is about the good of your fellow countrymen. i mean, that is a, that is a fundamentally an act of hope and invest estimate in the future. and i hope that that's what a lot of people who were watching last night took away from that before we wrap up here. alyssa, i want to get your take on just because you are you also worked up on the hill and, you know what it's like to be on the other end of a tussle with nancy pelosi. >> shall we say? she's here when that and honestly, that includes joe biden, who, you know, nancy pelosi was a force trying to convince him to do this. >> they have not spoken since that happened. she was on the floor of the convention here yesterday watching him speak.
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here's what she had to say to my colleague, jake tapper when she spoke with him about the drama that has been playing out between her and the president in the democratic party sometimes you just have to take a punch for the children he made the decision for the country my concern was not about the president, was about his campaign what an absolute legend know, i don't know that there's a singular figure in american, modern american politics that matters. >> and as more consequential control, the nancy pelosi and i will say this in my experience with it is simply not in her dna to see data that says democrats will lose and not act. and that's what she's referring to. xi saw how biden effected down-ballot races. she saw the house falling to republicans. she saw the senate being more favorable that's why she stepped in and it's classic nancy nancy pelosi, sometimes you have to take a punch for sure i mean, that live not
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quite sure what it means, but i'm there for it if you've ever listened to nancy pelosi, she's doing it for them. let me tell you almost everything she does. she will say it is for the children the kids coming up here on cnn this morning, democratic congresswoman debbie dingell joins us live. >> could ask her about that moment to she's going to discuss how joe biden's time in public office will be remembered plus democrats trying to go on offense on night one of the dnc on the fight over reproductive rights and hillary clinton rallies behind kamala harris, hoping the vice president won't face the same fate that she was handed in 2016 he's mocking her name and her laugh sounds familiar but we have him on ron now full comedy is coming to cnn what could go wrong i got
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wrestlers we bring them we wednesday night dynamite tbs let's story of my life and the history of our country is that progress is possible, but not guaranteed. we have to fight for it and never, ever give up. there is always a choice. kamala has the character experience and vision to lead us forward. >> that was hillary clinton rallying around kamala harris and her presidential bid last night here at the dnc clinton, of course, the first woman to lead a major party ticket eight years ago, recalled the similarities between her and
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harris's careers care we both got our start as young lawyers helping children who were abused and neglected. that kind of work changes a person those kids stay with you clinton also noted the historic nature of a harris possible presidency and reflected on the progress that women have made over the past century together. >> we put a lot of cracks in the highest hardest glass ceiling. on the other side of that glass ceiling is kamala harris raising her hand and taking the oath of office as are 47 i said add up the united states all right. our panel is back. i have to say, you know, i'm actually kind of interested to know what you think of this moment when she talked about
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donald trump, who of course she lost to and the crowd started to chant lock him up there. is this particularly i just want to play the moment because the look on her face it says a lot. just watch donald trump fell asleep at his own trial. and when he woke up he made his own kind of history. the first person to run for president with 34 felony convictions certainly taking a different tact than kamala harris has. >> this has happened at harris rallies and she does not she does not entertain it. >> she's had these kind of john mccain moments of rising above it in not saying you, saying, we're going to let the courts deal with it. listen. hillary clinton desert serves that moment. so i'll give it to her, but it gets back to this broader point the difference of the race that she ran, it was more about i'm with
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her and, you know, the kind of personality of we need to elect the first female president, kamala harris is doing something very different. she is making it. we won't go back. it is about the people we are rising above its forward-looking i think that it was a beautiful testament. i think there's something beautiful about a woman who, you know, who lost to trump thing. this is going to be the person who beats him and not having any kind of grudge about it. but it's a very different race yeah. >> well, but i also think it reminds in some ways, it reminds people certainly reminds democrats what the stakes are here. >> i mean, they look at did they remember the clinton trump race for democrats? it was a traumatic experience. and so i think the way i would agree, the way kamala harris is handling the lock him up at her rallies, i think is the right is the right strategy, but i also do not begrudge hillary clinton this moment, both for her own personal, considering that she was tarred in that way for the entire camp and pain and now he is actually a convicted felon. i think she should get that moment of emotional satisfaction just as human but i also actually think that it serves to remind
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democrats of the stakes what it is like when donald trump is in power in this country. and so kind of letting that moment marinate and play out, i actually thought was smart for hillary clinton to do there are a couple of things about hillary clinton's speech last night. not only the fact that she's able to lean into certain things like alyssa said, that kamala harris doesn't and can't, you know, the identity of it? i'm with her being the first female president the cracks in the glass ceiling, even even the lock him up, chants. i mean, you got but to remember that republicans targeted in tarred hillary clinton since 1988, it's been, it's been literally a death by 1,000 cuts of what they've tried to do to this woman's character. and she has done nothing but be a true icon of american politics throughout that entire time that's, that it's kind of first, the second thing that it highlighted is that the difference and we talked about the gender gap and ron brownstein can come on and talk about the gender gap but the reason that democrats in kamala
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harris do so much better with women is because there's a true understanding that women are not only the backbone of this country, but backbone of our political structure because there's a direct line, a through line between fannie lou hamer shirley chisholm, hillary clinton, in kamala harris and you don't have that same through line in the republican party and you see that in the democratic party, and that was on display last night and women of all of all shades of all backgrounds were able to see that and feel that whether or not you are an independent republican or democrat, you're able to see that you have a place at least in the democratic party. well, and i will just also posit shermichael. i'm interested in your take on this that donald trump is a uniquely difficult messenger for republicans to use to appeal to women voters. >> yeah, i mean, look, we performed in the past very well with suburban suburban women voters for a long time. trump may that at difficult and some republican strategists have argued that we probably won't be able to regain some
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advantages there until 2028. that's an interesting argument that i'm open to, but i wouldn't necessarily ignore the divides, the gender divide. i think that men can play, particularly those disengaged low-propensity men can make they make a mathematical difference in places like wisconsin, in places like pennsylvania where they are more blue collar, they don't have a college degree, they do want to message that speaks to their future. and i just a future of women and i do think democrats have some issues there. >> somebody made a point while ago that election seasons we talk about women like they're the small demographic and voting group i think country and i still find it wild and i think you'll agree with me on this, that donald trump didn't seriously consider a female vice presidents, never in the top tier of candidates. he was vetting and consider haley, you can see i can look considering the issues at stake last night we saw reproductive rights, abortion front front and stage in prime time, and they don't have a messenger on the ticket can soften them on those issues or even lean into ivf and some of the other ones related to
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it. >> and i think the other thing the other problem that trump and vance have with women, first of all, it's the substantively some of what they're advocating for would take rights away from women. and so that right there is you're starting from behind the eight ball but i also think the way that they talk about women mean as, as this kind of other, or when you see j.d. vance using all of this almost like technical language to describe like postmenopausal women is that we don't talk like that like it makes it seem like first of all, they don't know any women and second of all, it kind of underscores the larger messaging problem they have, which is that people don't believe leave that they care about them, that they're going to fight for them. because when you take more than half the population and basically say, i don't communicate in a way that says i don't think of a human that, that is a tough barriers to overcome. >> but it also, but one of the things that happened last night, even during the reproductive rights portion of the program is that uniquely enough? men are finally waking up in 2024 and saying, you know
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what, there's a role for us to play in this battle for reproductive rights. this isn't just a women's issue. yeah, you know, for me, you know, being an advocate for my wife when she was going through doubt childbirth, nearly dying, and all of those things, maternal health, those things really matter. and so we're seeing that on display as well. >> but candidly, these, these votes that are related to abortion rights, the ballot measures wouldn't be getting the margins they were if it was trying to women, but it's so high you in kansas and ohio and kansas, they're voting rights. alright, absolutely. >> our panel is going to stick around, is 28 minutes past the hour, and we do have our morning roundup. >> donald trump giving a glimpse into his it's potential administration if he were to win reelection, he told reuters he would tap elon musk for a cabinet or advisory role if most would do it, the two men recently held a conversation on the platform x, of course the formerly known as twitter the u.s. government says, iran is behind the hacking attempts targeting trump and the biden-harris campaign, u.s officials believe if that the investigation marks
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the clearest sign yet of iran's efforts to influence the presidential election. and this for pro palestinian protesters arrested on day one of the democratic national convention for breaching a security fence police now now reassessing their security plans for tonight and we're not going to tolerate anyone who is going to vandalize things in our city. we're not going to tolerate anyone one thing we're going to commit acts of violence police say that the protesters did not breach their inner security perimeter inside the dnc here last night between beaches from celebrities and politicians. >> we also heard from for everyday americans, they were billed as in power full testimonials. they highlighted one of the harris campaign's central issues reproductive rights sharing their harrowing and deeply personal stories
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about pregnancies and miscarriages and how state-level abortion bans endangered and changed their lives our baby girl, we waited until amanda was sick enough to receive standard abortion care eventually, amanda's temperature spiked she was shaking disoriented, and crashing something. >> didn't feel right to emergency rooms sent me away because of louisiana's abortion ban, no one would confirm that i was miscarrying. >> i was raped by my stepfather after years of sexual abuse at age 12. i took my first pregnancies has and it was positive i can't imagine not having a choice well, joining me now, jessica macular, the president of emily's list. be political action group that helps elect democratic female
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candidates who support abortion rights. >> jessica, thank you very much for being with us this morning. >> thank you for having me she in particular hadley duvall, who was featured in that ad and the kentucky at race with just such a deeply personal story, this is clearly become a really central part of a post roe america, right? >> as women who are attempting to get care for all sorts of situations have in many states struggled to do it. and i know you actually have your own personal story that you only recently started to share in public. what did we see on stage last night? and how do you think these personal stories at touch american voters? >> why i think one of the most important things that we did last night with two really draw this contrast and to show what was at stake in this election cycle. and so we really rooted that in what is it? the heart of this issue? this is a deeply personal issue and it affects people all over the country previous, like me, you were talking about kentucky and ohio, people across the country
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understand what it means and what the impact is of these really draconian abortion laws that have been passed by republicans in the wake of donald trump's supreme court tearing up down roe and so i think really rooting that first-night in these deeply personal stories, i heard someone say that it kind of felt like the oxygen left the room in that moment when hadley talked about what it looks like, it's not beautiful for a child to have to carry her parents child and that that moment that really really good that's two people and this is, these are deeply personal issues and we saw that on stage last night, donald trump has tried to downplay the issue of abortion as one that is going to affect this election. but i think it's worth remembering that this is the first presidential race in the wake of the fall of roe versus wade what are you? seeing is because i know you do a lot of internal polling, surveying. there's a lot of information coming in about where the electorate is on this issue that you think isn't getting enough attention.
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>> i think we've consistently seen an underestimation. it is of how dramatically the landscape has shifted since the roe decision since the dobbs decision is an upending of politics. and so when we look at where we are in a presidential campaign, you're often looking at where are we compared to 16, where we compared to 20, but we cannot understand this election cycle without the context of 2022. and the dobbs decision up ended politics in this country. women in particular are outrage. and commonly harris is meeting not outrage with a real vision for we don't have to live like this. it doesn't have to be like this. we can restore these rights. we can restore these freedoms, and people are responding and a really amazing way where do you see, where do you see this decision that president biden made to step aside for kamala harris affecting how the house and senate are going to play out because i know those are lots of the races that you worked on and are going to be deeply affected by that? absolutely. i mean, the electrification of the country since kamala harris took the helm of this campaign,
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is something that is going to affect people up and down the ballot. >> i would also say kamala harris is the best messenger in the country when it comes to reproductive freedom. and so having her at the top of this ticket really is going to drive the contrast in this election. i would keep a real close eye on young women, young women are going to be determinative in this election. we have seen massive swings in their enthusiasm and they're going to turn out in force for her and candidates down the ballot, right? >> jessica macro for us this morning. thank you so much for coming in. i really finished it in okay. >> still ahead here on cnn this morning, day two of the democratic national convention with barak and michelle obama's set to speak. what has happened to when they go low, we go high. our panel will discuss and congresswoman debbie dingell joins us live to talk about biden's place in history after his opening night speech at the dnc by stood on that stage, gave a powerful speech and prove to the country and to the world that he can stay up past 8:00 p.m. the
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to you by meso mesobook.com if you or a loved one have mesothelial not we'll send you a free book to answer questions you may have called now and will come to you 800 a31, 3,700 i know more foreign leaders by their first names and know them weldon, anybody live. >> that's because i'm so old president biden cracking jokes during his late night address at the dnc about the very thing that stood in the way and ultimately halted his reelection bid. >> his age very emotional. biden took the stage to tout his accomplishments and pass the torch to kamala harris, making a clear effort to credit his vice president for her work as she takes the reins. >> thank you. kamala, we finally beat big pharma and guess. >> who cast the tie-breaking
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vote? vice president shouldn't be president kamala harris. she's tough she's experienced and she has a normal integrity so like the comma was the very first decision i made before i became when i became are nominated and it was the best decision i made my whole career joining me now is doug from michigan congresswoman debbie dingell, congresswoman. >> wonderful to see you basically could pay here. >> i appreciate the early morning after what was a very late night for president biden's speech until after midnight. what was the feeling? for you in the room about what he did there because as much as people were thanking him for his own service, they were also thanking him for stepping aside. >> what wasn't emotional. i mean, you couldn't if you know joe biden like i have for 40 years, you've watched 40 years of history and know what happened. couldn't not a crime at the beginning of it there
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were very different. i mean, i think everybody recognized last night how much he's given to this country in 50 years of public service, ensure there's some bitter sweetness to it because there were people in the rooms that felt that he had to go when i didn't love the way it all played out speaking of people who suggested that he had to go nancy pelosi was on the floor. >> speaker emerita watching what unfolded. joe biden was on the tarmac actually after his speech as he was heading out and he went on vacation on air force one, was asked to about whether he was angry about how it all played out, whether he had spoken with pelosi. let's watch that moment no, i haven't spoken no no i one impose my no one knew was coming what i decided to do was i didn't want to to the extent that the party thought they move senate seats and house
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that would have been the topic. >> you would have had to cover the entire camp and i wasn't worth who do you make of what he said there you think that that's the truth? >> i've been through, not this public a moment, but my husband and nancy had their moment. they came back together. they work together, wouldn't have been affordable care act if people watching may not know she did a little of what she did with john dingell the energy and commerce committee look, there's a lot of hurt at first come back together, unite because you've got the common goal and everybody knows who have got to be united right now to win in november so winning in november, of course means beating donald trump's. >> so let's talk about what he is doing today, as well as i want to show. also another moment where biden was also asked about how trump has called what happened with biden and harris, a quote, unquote coup. this was how biden answered that question. take a look.
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>> i think he has a problem i think he has a problem. he says, now, trump is campaigning in michigan today where's he going? why and how do you think that the message he'll carry will resonate? >> so i think i agree with president hundred percent. i think he has a problem. he has chosen to go to how michigan, which was the scene of kick, kick in march, only three weeks ago, has significant history of kkk activity. militia activity et cetera. and i think at a time where you're trying to bring the country together it reinforces for all of us the kind of hate and division his presidency representative for years and we'll see what happens. but i think his campaign is going to be the same old, let's divide people, let's flip people like to encourage hate and anxiety. and i hope we all remember his
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effort is not to bring us together as a country. >> so speaking of division and how our politics is conducted, we're going to hear from the obama most at tonight, here at the convention, michelle obama famously and in 2016, was on stage saying, when they go low, we go high. and that also seems to be there seems to be something of a divide among democrats about whether that's the right way to go, considering the way the trump campaign's and whether going high as enough to stand up to the way he campaigns you look at that well as someone who is occasionally been the target of donald trump i'm one of the ones he has a more personal feeling four, i wrote are not op-ed in the new york times in january said that you have to stand up to donald trump when he goes after you you i think you have to do it respectfully. >> you have to do it civilly. we have to. but i don't think we can get let him get away with his hateful attacks. i mean, i wrote it after he said
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his christmas message to remind people was rot in hell last year. >> quite a christmas message. >> thousand six staying. >> you were the loudest voice, maybe the only voice flashing those warning signs that michigan was endangered. >> donald trump. what are you seeing out there now? i mean, do you see those same warning signs? i know we have to run scared. right. and i know we have to have that jill stein redox, but what. are you seeing differently or are you seeing in different anything differently today versus, for democrats versus what you saw in 2016, if you'd asked me a month ago, i was very worried. we had for demographics that i was worried about. there was more enthusiasm young people, not all young people. we've still got college campuses that are, that are mixed, are coming back the african we're communities, coming back, we still have a union hall problem to be perfectly frank and it's how closest the election going to be and then the mideast continues to play out. and a new area that i'm kinda paying attention to a seniors, i heard a lot of seniors about ten
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different seniors mean sliced weakness at night to protect social security, do we not matter? do we sink or irrelevant or both parties throwing us out? we have work to do. there's more energy, there's more enthusiasm. he's going to come down to who turns out their vote on the union hall. >> problem. as you say, what do you think kamala harris needs to do to fix that? >> well, i think it's already beginning. i mean no, she just said so eloquently, nobody believed me in two have already roiled all she wants is more resources can we didn't get him and they never walked into a union hall. >> there were already walking into union halls. she was in local 900 last week or the strikes rather dark, talked to a lot of those guys thanks. after she was there, i've talked to every president in the state of michigan and most of the national, i'm going in those halls. she's going in those halls. we're going to talk to him. we got to tell destroyed. we've got to do that comparison. >> all right. congresswoman debbie dingell. thank you so much for being with us. thanks
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to our panel as well. straight ahead here, actually, you guys will be back in just a second straight here ahead on cnn this morning night too. but the dnc, the theme for the evening. he powerhouse line-up of speakers up next ne to trade bitcoin plus oil plus gold plus so much more. let me introduce you to plus 500. >> lean into it and easy to use treaty app that gives you a glimpse into the future futures trading.
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see the difference. >> open program to expand something radical industry streaming exclusively on max cnn news central how do we explain that? when someone is cool or acts like a bully, you don't stoop to their level know our motto is when they go low, we go high that was michelle obama framing the presidential race in 2016. >> she's going to be back at the dnc tonight. one of the featured speakers along with her husband barak, second gentleman, doug emhoff and illinois governor jb pritzker. the theme for this evening, a bold vision for america's future is how there framing it. what's go round the table here as we wrap things up and just look ahead to tonight. at kate,
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what are you looking for? >> yeah. we'll look the obamas are two of the most beloved figures in the democratic party also barack obama certainly has appeal to these moderate independent voters. you look at the obama coalition from 2008, and in many ways but that. is what kamala harris is looking to recreate so i think when president obama speaks, democrats listen. i think this will be a moment for him to really lay out the stakes. fire people up, get people energized, excited. so i think it'll be a really emotional, but also just powerful, an energetic moment tonight. >> the same thing. i think that people there are two points i want to make people forget how, how magnanimous brock obama was he one, not only north carolina and florida, but he also went indiana in 2008. >> i also don't want i love shell obama. >> but i think that the mood has changed in the democratic party. so i think she we'll say this time when they go low, we go to hell i mean, james carville put it, quote, after
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eight years of trump, there's no discussion among anybody about going high michael. i want to hear from president obama because i think democrats again, really have to figure out how to seal some of these cracks. me, you have charade brown oh, not hear tests are not here. these are two individuals who are likely going to lose their senate seats i do think there are still some issues with the vice president and working class white voters. i still think there are some issues with the vice president and men of all races. and perhaps president obama can speak to those demo groups and maybe encourage him to come back to the democratic party it's a great of car in this i think disagree with shallow bomber, should stick to that message and let me tell you why there is going to be a time in politics were donald trump is not the singular force in our lives where we move beyond the casual cruelty than name calling the division, and we need leaders who are going to rise above and are going to teach the next generation but we should do politics. >> hawaii came up doing politics. are you guys came up doing politics? i don't think we need more going low. i think actually why kamala harris is
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resonating is because it is hopeful. it is forward-looking in his joyful, it is not named calling him punching down. >> i certainly will take some hope i'm not sure how hopeful i am that we're going to get back to a place. and exercise. >> can answer away to say quickly as a republican, if someone slaps you in the face, you don't just say, all right, thanks. see you later. you slapped the hell out of them back. so i would not necessarily agree with no. kaye that he believed that there's fall comedy is coming to cnn. what could go wrong? i got news for you, for me or saturday, september 14th at nine on cnn we are driving down the road
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