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>> we also make proactive year coronary track health products. you core is a life stage right today at your core.com hello, and welcome to cnn special live coverage of the fourth and final day of the democratic national convention. >> i'm brianna keeler in chicago and my good friend and colleague boris sanchez, is in washington. and all week we have heard from democrats and some independents and republicans to why they think vice president kamala harris should be the 47th president of the united states? tonight she will take the stage to make her own case. we're just getting some new details about harris's main objectives when she does give her acceptance speech tonight last night, it was her running mate, minnesota governor tim walz giving his own heartfelt address to this crowd, introducing himself and his family to the nation jen, with this a viral moment from his son gusts while he framed
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democrats is the party of freedom. eva mckend are national politics correspondent is here with us, with cnn special correspondent jamie gangel eva, what are you hearing about harris's plans tonight? >> well, brianna cnn learning that to the extent that she can be she's he's been hunkered down. she hasn't been at the convention every night because she has been preparing for this big moment. we know that she's going to lean heavily into her personal biography. we hear this out on the campaign trail, talking about being the product of a single mother who worked hard. she's also going to make a forceful case against former president donald trump. up and talk about project 2025, the conservative policy proposal. i talking about how it is a threat to democracy and other basic freedoms. and then she'll lean heavily into patriotism. that is something that we often hear the lament write that the left lament rather that the rights sort of has sort of taken a monopoly on patriotism,
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but we're going to hear her talk about how she loves her country. do yeah. we've been hearing democrats trying to reclaim that in some of the speeches that they've been giving jamie? yes. all very important. of course, the speech tonight. i mean, it really is the main thing, however, yeah, let's talk about what people are buzzing about as they pre-game each night before the program begins. and that is beyonce first though i do want to play a clip of the new acapella version of freedom the played monday night before harris surprised the crowd here tell us come on, l.a much on the regular pay new wife what kind of america do we want one, we were divided depressed let's we were americans that are capella version has people going will she or won't she? >> and the answer is yes.
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>> yes. >> whatever you one of them. so first of all our colleague, elizabeth wagmeister, head for it was the first person to report that bianna they had given permission for the campaign to use that song and everyone rampant speculation does not begin to describe the will she won't ci but i have some more rampant speculation. your however, this comes from a source very familiar with the convention schedule. are you ready? yes. is on she's coming she's not coming she's coming. i don't think she's coming. wait. it may happen two minutes later. it may not happen. so we don't know he really, really don't know. but even people, there is a block in the schedule. i'm told and no one knows what it is. so if it's happening, it's a very
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small circle, very interesting beyonce. i mean, that would set the place on fire, correct? and this is about passing the torch no question. >> so i think the other thing just to think about the week altogether, but tonight, we're going to see sort of the next more of the next generation governor gretchen whitmer of michigan is speaking congresswoman katherine clark, who's part of the leadership is speaking senator mark kelly of arizona, who was part of the veep stakes. but we actually put together there it is so i think it's almost 20 and i am sure we left somebody out, but we try to sort of go and look at people who spoke at this convention and look at that deep bench. this didn't happen by accident this week, the party wanted to show off. this is the next-generation. this is the way forward. >> yeah, it is a big bench
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which is not always been the case when it comes to democrats. so it's been very interesting to watch jamie eva. thank you so much to both of you on this very big night. and now with us, we have democratic congresswoman of california, barbara lee. thanks for taking some time for us this afternoon. >> happy to be with you. this is so exciting. >> yeah, you've known kamala harris for a lot longer than most americans have. what are you hoping to hear from her this evening? yes well, i'm very excited for as well. >> secondly, i've known her over three decades and i think what americans will see and what i want them to see is kamala harris, who she is, what she stands for is first of all, we all know she's prepared. she's experienced, she's ready. she's been our vice president, but she is a unifier she cares about uc sees people's. she hears people who haven't necessarily been seen or heard. she's a person who really cares about the future, understanding that she got here through the blood, sweat, and tears of the black women and
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women and women of color who paved the way. and she honors that. but she's taken the ball forward and she's going to talk about the future and i hope she talks about her opportunity economic agenda. housing is a big issue. for people all around the country. and she laid that out as part of her economic agenda. that's going to be great. >> you wanted to talk about policies. and so do a lot of americans because one-third of americans say they don't know what she stands for. the trump campaign has actually launched a new website called kamala 2024 policies, dark com, which is trying to highlight the fact that she doesn't have a policy section on her own campaign website at this point. she does have a young campaign to be clear but how important is that? so that she isn't seeding herself, been defined by the republican ticket instead, well, first row, she can't play by their rules that's the first is what shirley chisholm taught me. you know, these rules weren't made
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for us, so those are their rules. she's going to set out her agenda clear about the policy aspects of it, but people want to see her also as a human being. so i suspect part of the speech will be about the policies, but also another part which is so important will be connecting with people, connecting people who'd she sees each and every day who she fights for it and has fought for throughout her life. and making sure that people understand this is not going to be easy. and she's going to, i hope and i'm certain i help ask people to help her to help her win this race because we have got to leave this convention with everyone mobilized to do the work. we've got to do the work. and i think she's going to give us that charge the uncommitted movement, which is lobbying for this ticket to change course on its israel policy. they wanted to speaking slot at the convention. they did not get one. do you think that they should have had that
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opportunity? >> well, let me just say, first of all, everyone has a right to have their voices heard democracy demands that. and in fact, i believe that she has laid out her position as it relates to the war. she has called for a ceasefire, and she has called for the release of hostages and she has set forth her agenda and i'm sure she'll talk a little bit about that, i guess tonight maybe and maybe not. but i think that it's important that everyone would ignite says that she hears people, she sees people and she believes and our democracy and the believes that every voice should be heard and that's what strengthens our democracy. and that's what democrats are for about. >> how worried are you that issue could cost democrats very important votes in michigan, we have to do our work. >> no one said it was going to be easy and she's connecting with people and you can see the poles all around the country. and in fact, she's very smart and she's very clear, she's
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very sincere. i'd been on the world stage with her. i was at the munich security conference. foreign leaders listened to her and she's a global leader and so she understands foreign policy and international relations and she understands what peace means. she understands what security means peace and security go hand in hand. and i believe that she's communicating that very clearly and will continue to communicate that. and people know that she will make a president that's going to take us it's forward and not backward the issue of abortion rights and access to abortion has factored so large at this convention. >> and i know that it's an issue that is quite personal to you. you have spoken publicly, really somewhat recently. it was in 2021. i want to play this clip. this is you speaking for the first time here just a few years ago as you described it a back alley abortion that you received in mexico shortly after you turned 16-years-old back in the mid 1960s? here it
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is my mother noticed i became introverted and very quiet. >> so she asked me what was going on with me at that point, i told her everything. i told her. i maybe maybe not could be pregnant she responded would love one of my mother's best friends and el paso helped me access the abortion. i could not get in california now, i was one of the lucky ones, madam chair. a lot of girls. and women in my generation didn't make it. they died from unsafe abortions in the 1960s unsafe septic abortions where the primary killer primary killer of african american women took you a long time to talk about something, obviously so personal. and this was before roe was overturned, not long before though how significant is this issue going to be for your party in this cycle? >> it's a very important, significant issue and for many reasons, of course people have
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a right to make decisions about their own body. this is about bodily autonomy. but when you look at it in the broader context, it's about our freedoms. donald trump, in this supreme court have begun to take away our freedoms, reproductive freedom voting rights, the right to live in a country that's free of pollution, climate change. our labor union rights are being turned back. you name it, and so this is important, is not only important for women, it's important for families, it's important for everyone, young people don't know the world without roe. >> that's always been the law of the land where they could they're constitutional right, at least where they could have an abortion if that was the decision they made. >> i did not talk about it because first it was very personal. it was my business. like it should be now people should have that right. but after the text is decision i was compelled to do that because i wanted women. i wanted people to know that there were members of congress
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who saw them, who heard them, who this was way before roe and i knew going in there, i haven't that abortion in a back alley and may go that i could die and i knew also it was illegal. there was illegal in california but illegal in texas. i was living in california by then had gone back to texas and then my mother's friend took me across the board and i knew i could be put in jail just like now, so many women could be criminalized, could be put in jail. so many health provider rioters these are very dangerous times and so we have to have a president, a president harris, and we have to have a democratic house and senate so that we can codify into federal law wow a person's right to access the abortion care and is their decision and that needs to be restored as the law of the land. and in fact, let me just say it's because of donald trump and people have to understand sometimes young people, especially don't see the connection between voting and their daily lives donald trump appointed three supreme court justices who are taking
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away their rights who are turn the clock back. that's the importance of any election. elections matter. we've got to have kamala harris as our president. tim walz as our vice president's, so that we can move forward and not go back to the days that i know so well. and that wasn't in the not so distant past. >> thank you so much and thank you for talking to us about something so personal to you, as you said, it's your business and it took you a long time talk about it. it was obviously a compelling reason for you to do it. congresswoman, thank you. >> we are really great being with you. >> so it has all led up to this. we are just hours away from i'm the grand finale and arguably the biggest moment of vice president kamala harris political life have democrats done enough this week to energize their base and sway independent in voters don't go anywhere. we are live from the democratic national convention in chicago right after this yeah. >> your worst nightmare, your car broke down that you're worried if it's going to cost you a fortune and repair bills
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families a chance not just to get get by, but to get ahead of is responsible for the content of his add jon, in the news team are at the dnc in chicago and john's going law that's what i'm talking about. what he said you daily show, complete dnc covering this week on comedy central, next day on paramount plus there for those first days and first steps, the new beginnings. >> and here we go again. >> where these moments are made. there is where you'll find because it's never been about what we're here to help protect you from it's always been about what we're here to help protect you for rafael romo at the georgia state capitol in atlanta. >> this is cnn it is the final
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day of the democratic national convention and a live look now at the united center, where vice vice president kamala harris will be taking the stage to introduce herself to the country later tonight yesterday, the spotlight was on her running mate governor tim walz, who leaned into his background as a teacher and football coach, giving a speech that at times felt a bit like a pep rally you can hear the crowd chanting. >> coach there, those are some of walz's former players there to lend their support on stage. but during his acceptance speech, it was really this emotional moment with his 17-year-old son, gusts that stole the show we had access to fertility treatments in one our daughter was born we named our hope hope goss, and gwen.
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>> you are my entire world and i love you all right let's talk now with our panel. >> okay. david urban, that's like political gold those that it was an incredibly touching moment, right? >> with his sudden, anybody who's got any shred of humanity just look at that and be like, wow, that's pretty touching. now that being said tim walz to me comes across as kind of a mean, spirited jim gaffigan, like this is kind of like a vacuolar guy for the midwest, but it is hard. he's getting up there scream and he's mean-spirited and look, the one thing that really bothers me about tim walz and your husband. she may have talked about this. i'm not i'm not getting the weeds about whether he deployed or not deployed carry a weapon of war are those things don't i'm not too granular. i want to hear tim walz stand up and
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explain to me while he said for 20 plus years that he was retired command sergeant major. when he wasn't he was not are targeting. he owes an apology to i think the people in the military just said, look, i made a mistake. i shouldn't have said that i am owning up to it. he did it before he's owned up. to, you know, he's made a mistake. i think right. rightfully came out and said nice things about, you know, he had a dui, lots of people had duis. he said, i made a mistake. i learned from and i move forward. i like to hear him say the same thing about the master sergeant. peace. >> listen as a journalist and someone who understands how ranks work in the military, the fact that he attained now ranked, but it did not retain it as he retired. i would like to ask a question to get an answer about that. i don't know if this is the venue to do that. i want to maybe not here. yeah. >> i wonder what you guys think i don't think that's the venue. i mean, look for four in ten voters across the country, didn't know who he was until last night, right? his goal last night was to educate the american public, not just the folks in this room who he is as a person, who he is as a father, who he was as a teacher and as a mentor. and i think
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that's exactly what he did here last night. i mean, the crowd loved it and across the country they have they had to have loved it. >> what do you want? sorry, go on. >> but look, i think you've got to clean up, clean that up. he does. and i think it's actually on brand for him to say, you know what, i got a little bit full of myself and said some stuff wasn't true. and if my student did that, i want my student to correct and i'm going to correct it and i think it actually jansen, i think we weren't a business where people think if you're just honest, we all sometimes posh up a story you're in there. but now you're on the main stage and get caught on it. just cough up the furball so we can move on from this issue, but i don't want to just want i'm not trying to steer thunder here, but he put it on his coin, right to your point, brianna, if he's said i attained the rank of command sergeant major, that's completely honest. just say that. don't get could to say i think it's important that after two cycles of having no veterans on the ticket, there's a veteran on both sides of the ticket and i do think if he owns that, it helps because most americans are going to hear 24 years in the national guard, there are a little bit less about the rank
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that he claimed or if you held a weapon, but it's better to own it and i think he does have that capability of doing it, leaning into that, i coached people, i taught people you admit when you did something and the reason that everybody is jumping on this is because this dude is a political superstar that you never heard of literally three weeks ago. this guy is political skills are extraordinary. his ability to connect is extraordinary. when i was an effort, i think to myself, i'm watching shapiro get up there in kill it. i'm watching wes moore get up there and kill it. i'm watching people buttigieg get up there in killeen. i'm like, why do we have this do to get his vp he gets up there and he is a cut above the best people in our party and he just got here. that's why they're trying to muddy this guy up because this do can go anywhere in the country and talk to anybody. so they're trying to muddy him up, just coughed up the furball and move on i do want to move on this, but i'm going to take the final word on this, preach, alyssa, because the veteran on non-veteran violence on this topic, it's kind of getting
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gross. >> these perspectives are really important. there are questions that need to be answered. no doubt, that these are incredibly important perspectives to have when you're getting this close to the white house and you're going to have them. that's what we know. all right? big night tonight. kamala harris is going to be taking the stage. what do you want to hear i mean, we're going to hear about her record. >> right? we're gonna hear about where she grew up, where she came from, her family, the things she worked about when you worked on when she was at a prosecutor who she went after the goals that she achieved and what she worked towards. and then she's going to talk okay, think about the future and what she has in mind in terms of helping the american families. she's going to talk about the bills that they're going to help people save and the rent. and i think she's not going to get into full policy stuff, but i think she's going to lean into what she wants to achieve. >> she's not going to get into full policies. barley was just on here saying that she wants to hear her she wants to hear are you saying 70 like yeah.
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>> they're not gonna get into granular details, but i think they're going to talk about what their goals are and how they're going to achieve them but you got to tell you what yan going to hear much because of the thunder row when she walks out on that stage, first of all, let's just be clear about something this is 2024, 60 years ago. it's 1964 it was freedom summer. you had two jewish kids and a black kid that got murdered in mississippi, just trying to register voters including a black voter name, fannie lou hamer, who came to this conference, who came to this convention she wasn't even allowed to speak. they wouldn't even feet fannie lou hamer 60 years ago this week, 60 years later, a black woman is going to be advanced out here as the nominee of this party. when she walks on that stage, buddy you're you're you he taught you saw tears last night. your tears. cheers. it's going to sound like a nuclear bomb going off in here. nobody's gonna be able hear
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what she says after that. okay. if there's sunder the lightning i think last night that was tim walz and that was also oprah. i want to play a moment from oprah when a house is on fire, we don't ask about the homeowners race or religion we don't wonder who their partner is or how they voted no we just tried to do the best we can to save them. and if the pace place happens to belong to childless cat lady wow we try to get that cat out to hilariously the woman they cut to turns out is a childless cat lady who hopes that the condition is not permanent, said, which is funny. how did that speech play? what what do you think it actually mobilizes
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its incredible. she's one of the biggest pop culture icons in america. because she is someone who worked in decades and daytime television talking to independents, to liberals and doesn't often lean into her politics. and she did a message that was elevating and talking about who we are, how we support our communities, what it means to be an american i think kamala harris could take some notes from this because, well, i agree she needs to do some interviews. she needs to lay out more specific policies that's not really what tonight's for. tonight is to talk about the character of the nation, what your leadership will look like and who you are as a person, if she emulates some of that oprah energy, i think it'll go very well. >> i'll just say here's one thing you're not going to hear tonight. you're not going to hear anything about the biden-harris record, right? i know. you're not going to hear about that revised jobs report that came out yesterday instead of the past she are million jobs less were created. >> well, we care about hannibal lecter about that. and what you're not going to, we're talking about lots of things. i view everything through the lens of pennsylvania. maybe that's maybe that's not a bad luck, but that's what i view everything he's so and you
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know, james carville once famously said, pennsylvania is pittsburgh and philly with alabama and the in-between, i'm not hearing a lot for the people from alabama here, right. like so walz, i think we're supposed to talk about that, but he wasn't he's not rocking. there's no bass pro contingent here, right? that's what's missing from this party, this this delegate, this convention. and if you're going to win pennsylvania, there better be some bass pro people up on that stage and we're ending today. i don't know if any bass pro folks are shown a look i thought yesterday your point was eroded a little bit. you had law enforcement up here. you have people who are former republicans up here. you have people i think really speaking to some of the traditional things that you would expect from republican party concerned about law and order being against riots and insurrections. so there is a little bit of swapping going on between the parties. i think you guys are picking up epsom a working class people color that you haven't had. we picking up some folks that we haven't had, but i think that tomorrow i think that's tonight kamala harris can do some things that i think people don't expect. i don't know what he's going to do, haven't seen this speech? but i know calm harris i've known her for 25 years. i vote
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for kamala harris for district attorney in san francisco. i voted for her for attorney general. i voted for her for senator. i voted for her for vice president and then for president. and she's not who the right-wing thing she is i mean, the left in our state did not get along with calmer here she is tough. she is tough as nails. she doesn't book foolishness. she had a big, big problem with the left in in california because she was a real prosecutor. she gets a lot of credit now for some i stuff, that she did, but she didn't pick any foolishness. and i think that if she can put that tough side forward, it might help will be seen. >> we'll have to see who she is selling herself as the night. >> well, yeah. yet she was rated the second most liberal senator, most progressive center other than bernie sanders. yet her policy positions in 20 2020, were so progressive sort of the mainstream but they're walking away from him here as quickly as that it. who's going to show up though david, when you talk about the rating, i'm not
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quite sure there's last congress it was this last congress or the last congress for shoes before she was vice president about that though she went when she was saying all that stuff. >> and doing all that stuff, do you notice she didn't seem comfortable on herself? during that primary because that's not kamala harris. and we know that what you're seeing now confident, i'm the prosecutor, i'm going to deal with these problems. that's actually but that's troubling to me than anyone. >> but i also think serving in the white house at the highest level of government should be moderating force for anyone. i left the white house as a staff are far more moderate than i went and i think for her to say yeah, for her to can't say having been born at it for all americans, i've moderated on some of these issues and here's where i am now. i also think she when you're the vice president of the united states, you have a boss, right? you have somebody that you have to report to. and, you know, you learn a lot from that person to they spent a lot of time together. and so i think you're right right? i think some of her policies that she might have gone in there with made it have changed. >> well, that's great. but i'd love to hear her come out and say, well, i'd like to here
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say like i am now, this is my this is my journey from queen of the green new deal to pro fracking. i just like hr2 sky, i'm sure she's going to frame it exactly thank? you guys so much, really appreciate the conversation and next, while democrats rally here in chicago, the trump campaign is continuing its counter programming blitz through key states. former president donald trump is in arizona zona, j.d. vance is in georgia, and their message to voters will talk about that right after this need new glasses by one. what vision works i i'm just telling everyone by one pair get one free for back-to-school vision works. see the difference borders since the
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vance, also making a campaign stop to counter program the dnc front and center today for trump though, is the key issue of immigration. we want to discuss with republican congressman carlos gimenez of florida. he's a member of the house armed services and homeland security committees. he's also a former mayor of miami-dade county congressman. thank you so much for being with us trump obviously expected to attack vice president kamala harris on her immigration record democrats, conversely, they've gone after trump for his role in tanking that bipartisan senate bill over political reasons the numbers show that border crossings are down significantly. i see you laughing. a border crossings are down significantly in recent months. she does seem to be performing better in polling than joe biden was on this issue. do you think as an issue it it may be losing its effect as a line of attack no, absolutely not. and it should not be because this is really cynical politics at its best the biden-harris administration
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has been able to control the border since day one. they chose not to that's why we have 10 million immigrants, at least illegal immigrants here in the united states, because of the harris-biden administration's so look, she's in favor open borders. and so what will happen now they'll control the border is like we told them, they could by policy that they didn't need all these resources. they were asking for. they just needed to change their policy and re-install some of those trump era policies that worked so well, which they're doing now. but as soon as if she becomes the president believing those policies are going to go away. and we're going to see this over and over again. i don't believe anything that she says because i look at look i look at people and what they don't but in the past, that's the best indicator of what you're going to do in the future. and we've had over 10 million immigrants crossed the border during a biden-harris and if harris becomes the president was she will not be. we can expect another 10 million during the during her first term i believe that figure is encounters as opposed to actual entries. you're talking about people that cbp has
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encountered. many of those people have sent back you talked about the resources that the biden administration had been asking for in that bipartisan senate bill i spoke with representatives for customs and border protection they were actually asking for those additional resources and some of the policies that you noted that were installed during the trump administration because of the coronavirus pandemic title 42, specifically those had been debated in court and it wasn't clear that they were going to be able to withstand for a long period after the pandemic receded yeah. >> but you don't you forget one big one in which is remain in mexico and so when people, and here's, here's, here's what happened. when you have a policy that says when you're asking for asylum and then you have to wait in mexico, remain in mexico awaiting your asylum hearing. 90% of the people are rejected by the asylum courts. and so 90% of the people would not be able to enter the united states. so the word going back home was, hey, don't even try
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to get into the united states because 90% of you are not going to make it when biden change that. and now you're able to enter into the united states is when you saw this flood. and by the way, the 10 million doesn't even count. the 2 million gotaways that we know are in the nation right now. they got away and so look, it's been a disaster. a will continue to be a disaster. kamala harris, though, has been in charge of this for a long, long time. and she's done basically nothing about it until, hey, it became a political issue and now they, they found, they found the light. oh god, we got to do something about it, but it's very cynical and it's actually almost a slap in the face of the american people. they could have none of this should happen none of this should have happened. and they allowed it to happen for three-and-a-half years and believe me, if they're if they're elected, they remain in power. it will continue right after the election congressman, i do want to ask you about latino voters. >> she seems to be performing far better than president biden was among what will be a key
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demographic. and this election, i believe we have a poll of voters in arizona where trump is today, nevada, where he's going to be tomorrow, georgia and north carolina. she so i don't think that was the pull that i was referencing, but we do have it. i promised. she seems to be double digits there it is. 14 points above where donald trump was. do you believe that this renewed energy with a new candidate at the top of the democratic ticket a roadless some of the progress can hear me, congressman no. >> you cut off for a second because the question the poll is really just a set up to say that kamala harris is doing better than president biden was among what will be a key demographic in the election. i'm wondering if you think that having her at the top of the ticket a erodes some of the progress that the former president had been making among latinos for a little while. you look, you're going to get you get a sugar high and all that until people actually get to
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figure out who kamala harris really is? and so she hasn't come in front of anybody, has an answer. any questions. now, flip-flopping back and forth as to some of the positions he took in night in 2019, about open-border getting rid of ice, all that kind of stuff which is a far left progressive agenda, which she really is a far left progressive so when people actually find out what she's all about i think president trump is going to get some of those latino voters back. but look, 40% of the latino vote is still a very good number for president trump, but he's going to do far better wants the tainos find out who kamala harris really is? >> congressman carlos jimenez. i apologize for the technical issues. i wish we had more time, but i look forward to catching up against you yeah, me too. thanks. >> still ahead. the democratic conventions enthusiasm, maybe tempered by protests over president biden's middle east policy members of the uncommitted movement are having a sit in outside the convention and shan and demanding a palestinian american be allowed
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direct redefining insurance, five good things listen wherever you get your podcasts in an inflamed middle east. >> we know the one thing that can most immediately released pressure and bring calm to the entire region a deal that brings this diverse group of 109 hostages home and ends the suffering of the innocent civilians in gaza. >> that was a plea from the parents of 23-year-old hostage, hersch goldberg polin, who is an israeli american being held hostage by hamas hersh lost part of his left arm when terrorists threw a grenade into the bunker that he was hiding in with a number of other people well, on october 7, and
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then they abducted him that was a somber moment at this convention in the night coincided also with news that democratic officials would not be giving a speaking slot to the pro-palestinian uncommitted movement a sit in is now underway outside of the united center. the co-founder of the uncommitted national movement of awesome it's alawieh is joining me now from the protest, abbas, what did you think of this moment that you saw at the convention last night thank you so much, brianna, for having me. >> i am seated outside the united center right now bester having a very emotional last 24 hours i was in the arena now, when we heard from the israeli american parents of hersh, the hostage that is being hoped, it was being held in gaza right now, i was deeply moved by. i heard them say that every every in every one of us, every human, there's a universe and in the muslim tradition, we have every if you harm a single
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person, if you, if you arm single person says if you harmed all of humanity, that's precisely because i am in touch with the humanity of every single person that me, and uncommitted voters around the country in deep the majority of democrats support palestinians, human rights, as well as support updating the gaza policy to ensure that our government i mean, does not continue on its current destructive tracks of sending more and more weapons to the israeli military that are being, that are being used to kill over 16,000 children or 40,000 civilians. it's a immoral, it's against the law. it's deeply illegal both in u.s. law and international law were urging the policy at, were urging party to take a different approach abbas you got the official know tell us about learning that news. >> if you were told why so i'm one of 30 uncommitted delegates here at the convention. we've been pushing for an arms embargo and a ceasefire. we came here as 30 we've grown to 300. harris and uncommitted
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delegates were pushing for both of those things. and one of one of our secondary asks was for a palestinian american to speak from the stage we knew that this was a reasonable ask, especially because the democratic the democratic platform includes specific language that says israeli americans, palestinian americans are viewed equally, are valued equally in our party, since that's true, we also wanted to hear from a palestinian american. our party would be lucky to hear from palestinian americans. palestinian americans are honorable people who were lucky to learn from where leaders in our democratic party. and so the party would be very lucky to hear from palestinian-americ an. we were very surprised with her, is very shocked that there would be an attempt to silence palestinian-american voices. there should be room to discuss a sentiment that is widely supported among democratic voters. most people in our country that palestinian human rights are essential, are essential to our party. we know that there isn't room for that discussion. the republican party there is room in the democratic party because most voters support palestinian
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numerics with human rights, most democratic voters support cosine human rights. most democratic voters support a stops to the unconditional flow of weapons to netanyahu's murdered harris regime. that's why we need policy change immediately. and that's why we're urging vice president harris, president biden, and the dnc to reconsider and have a palestinian american speaking from the stage, we would be lucky to hear from a palestinian americans. my son is on, i'm waiting for a call to hear whether they will reconsider abbas. >> you're very clear what you want from israel you are clear what you want from the biden-harris administration right now negotiations are going on on a ceasefire-hostage deal. they are faltering. what do you want? hamas to do in these negotiations i'm american, i pay i pay tax dollars to this country. >> i understand that our country thankfully, does not send weapons to hamas i do
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understand that our country, unfortunately sends weapons to the israeli military the israeli military is using those weapons to kill civilians on mass. the kill babies on mass. and so what i want this for my government to play a productive role, i want for my government when saying that we want a ceasefire to be clear about how we achieve a ceasefire, you want a ceasefire, you stop sending fire. you want, you want the bombing and to stop you stop sending bombs. some urging president biden and biden, please stop sending bombs that are killing babies. it's urgent, it's urgent. >> abbas alawieh. thank you so much for being with us. we do appreciate it we'll continue to follow the story. we'll be right back some things stand the test of time. like a family car, the hartford has been ensuring experienced drivers for generations many who switched to the aarp auto insurance program from the hartford saved an average of
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off your brand-new safe step login tub one 3770 to six. there's never been a better time. that's 1803770 to six so you khan is 22-years-old and we've been together most of my life not often. >> do you have a childhood dog that leaves this long, so i think it's really unique beacon special that we've experienced so many, so many things in life together knowing that he's getting good nutrition and that he has energy is a huge relief for me me and my dad. >> you took the little been we're so grateful to have had this time with him. >> so let's keep it going and make everyday special she grew up in a middle-class home. she was the daughter of a working mom, and she worked at mcdonald's while she got her degree kamala harris knows what it's like to be middle-class is why she's determined to lower health care costs and make housing more affordable
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donald trump has no plan to help the middle-class. just more tax cuts for billionaires being president is about who? to fight for. and she's fighting for people like you and kamala harris. >> and i approve this message u-haul, we know every family moves at their own pace. is that heavy? >> that's why we have you box we can store it. excited about the new house where worship it was going to get the biggest rule. how and when you want it, you are reserve today at you well.com then the first bill is subway has never been easier just by inner foot login out, get another free donor hard part is tenants review. >> he doesn't get a second foot long, waits seriously. i'veilable in gummies find
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it at walmart i'm jeff zeleny at the democratic national convention in chicago. >> and this is cnn closed captioning is brought to you by sokoloff law mesothelioma victims call nat out $30 billion in trust money has been set aside. >> you may be entitled to a
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portion of that money call 1808, 5-9, 2,400. that's when 808, 5-9, 2,400 maybe you have seen it in your feed. researchers say social media is being flooded with fake political endorsements. many created by artificial intelligence. and this is one of the latest fakes. it was actually shared by former president trump suggesting wrongly that he had been endorsed by taylor swift cnn's hadas gold is with us now. i mean, i think hadas, you'd have to be hiding under a rock to think that taylor swift might actually endorse donald trump, but there might be some other ones that could definitely fool people. and i wonder how they can know whether what they're looking at it his real or not? >> yeah, other ones from all sides of the political spectrum here beyond aid is getting so scary. how good air artificial intelligence is getting at mimicking what could be real images, even real videos. but there is a new misinformation database that is trying to help this is run by the news literacy project we got cnn got
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an exclusive look before it launched today, it's a nonpartisan group that launched this searchable misinformation database. and it chronicles more than 450 instances of election-related misinformation. a lot of them, a.i generated and actually one in ten of them are fake endorsements, especially celebrity endorsements. this is a good database that you can use if you see something in your feed it looks a little weird, especially if it leans into your biases to go check it out, see if it's any way real. the website is misinfo dashboard dot newsletter now let's look at some examples just to see how real these things can look up, pull up one, this is celebrity ryan reynolds. it shows him wearing a shirt that's a play on the title of g.o.a.t. says kamala removes a nasty orange states it's a cheeky t-shirt. you might see somebody like ryan reynolds wearing this type of shirt. but according to this misinformation database that draws from trusted fact-checkers. this is a fake image. now i want to pull up again that one that form and
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we're president donald trump himself posted to his truth social platform. this is actually for images. it shows what seems to be a lot of swifties which we know very powerful force. the swifties, saying swifties for trump will looks to be a fake poster a foot poster of taylor wants you to vote for donald trump. now what's interesting about this one is according to this dashed sport to the news literacy project three of those images are fabricated, made by a.i. and if you zoom in on them, if you know something about a.i. you might be able to tell that these look a little bit off, but one of them is real, the one in that top, right, that young blonde woman wearing a cities for trump shirts. he's also in that lower right-hand one that is actually a real photo and that goes to show you how toughness can be because artificial into artificially generated images can be matched up with real images are real images can have artificially generated images superimposed sort of photoshopped on top of them. this can make it really difficult and that's why it's so important if you see something in your feed that doesn't feel right, it seems too good to good to be true
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especially if it leans into your own preconceived biases check it out, go to a trusted source or go to this source from the news literacy project. again, that website is misinfo dashboard dot dashboard.newslet ter.org. brianna all right. hadas. thank you so much for that. we appreciate it. and the convention all comes down to this. kamala harris speaking to the american people explaining why she should be their choice for president. we're going to discuss her challenge. we're going to talk about how she makes that argument after a quick break when he comes gummy bice loved back whether you're a professional driver or just a fan, vehicle breakdowns are costly. it started taghi sorry, making some really weird noises. >> the last thing i remember is just the engine cut out. >> if you're check engine light comes on tomorrow repair
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