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the next day on paramount plus welcome to cnn special coverage of the fourth and final night of the democratic national convention. >> i'm brianna keeler in chicago, my friend and colleague, boris sanchez, is in washington. and tonight, vice president kamala harris will be delivering the most important speech of her political career, attempting to reintroduce she's herself to the american people while accepting her party's nomination for president becoming the first black woman and woman of south asian descent to lead a major party ticket. we have cnn's priscilla alvarez with some new details on some of the policy points that harris will try to hit tonight during her speech. first though i do want to go to cnn's mj lee, who is here at the united center. mj. this is the grand finale after three days of what have really been
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electrifying speeches, this crowd has been so engaged on these evenings what should we expect to hear tonight? >> sorry, brianna, i forgot to hold the mic. the vice president appearing to i got this preparing to close out the dnc with her acceptance speech tonight after three days of exactly what you described, a burst of energy and enthusiasm on display here in chicago and we know that there's no question this is the biggest speech that the vice president has given so far in her career. and you'll notice that her public schedule today and yesterday were clear so that she could spend as much time as she would have wanted finalizing those preparations to deliver this speech on a campaign official tells us that there are really three major things that she would like to accomplish with this speech. first and foremost is just giving that introduction to the american people tuning in about the kamala harris story. we know that she plans on talking about her middle-class
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upbringing, her relationship with her mom, and the influence that she had in her career, and the decision that she made to become a prosecutor. we also know that there's going to be a portion of the speech that really gets into that contrast with donald trump and particularly project 2025, i suspect that this is going to be the peace that will really lean heavily into some of the policy decisions and positions that she has taken and what she envisions in a harris walz administration and finally, we are told that she is going to say that underlying all of this, what is fueling all of this, including her candidacy, is going to be a sense of patriotic duty. she will say unlike donald trump, she wants to be president for all americans. she has been working on this speech for weeks, so we suspect that really, most of the speech is written and what is going to be happening in the final hours is practicing delivery, making those final tweaks and edits. and as one advisor put it to me, i as she has been practicing what she has really been thinking about
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is how every sentence is going to land and is going to be received by people tuning in that of course includes everybody here in the united center, but also millions of americans that are going to be tuning in from their homes or in for solo, what policy is she going to be tackling in this address tonight? >> multiple policies. but immigration, of course, has been a prominent issue over the course of this presidential election cycle. look no further to today, went on the final day of the democratic national convention, foreign president donald trump is counter programming on the u.s mexico border hammering her and the administration over their immigration policy he's in a source tells me that the vice president is expected to stress a balanced approach to immigration, meaning addressing border security, but also the immigrants already residing in the united states. while also casting trump's policies as extreme. now, this may not sound like a novel argument, but it is very notable given where the democratic party is today. just look at the
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democratic party's platform in 2020. that platform included and talked about immigration and the u.s. is a beacon of hope with no mention of asylum limits. you're looking at the 2024 immigration platform there. this does include a crackdown on asylum and includes the asylum limits at this administration has put into effect because they have grappled with so many crises over the last several years. so there has been a shift in the party and immigrant advocates and allies are looking for the vice president to sort of put center of the message on immigration and talk about it in a balanced way. of course, the other thing that's going to be coming up quite a bit is that border for measure that bipartisan border measure the campaign has noted that they're going to go on the offensive on this. this is of course the measure that former president donald trump scuttled earlier this year, it's already come up multiple times during the course of this convention, and it's something that we're going to hear about likely again tonight. and in the weeks to come by this campaign and mj, many other speakers, of course this is a very busy
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evening. then we're going to see here including senator elizabeth warren taking the stage yeah. >> and you know, this convention is one that has given a voice and speaking slots really to a wide range of people, younger speakers, older speakers, elected officials, and regular people that have nothing to do with politics and across the ideological spectrum as well. and elizabeth warren, of course, represents a leader of the progressive movement. she was harris, his former colleague in the senate, and ran against harris back in 2020. that was the presidential campaign that i covered for years ago when warren was on with dana earlier today, brianna, i noticed it was sort of reflecting on the past eight years, she noted that back in 2016, a woman was nominated for the presidency in 2020. so many women actually ended up running for the presidency. of course, all of them were not successful. joe biden ended up winning that primary and she said, look, even in the last four years, we have had woman serving as vice president kamala harris, the intention
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there seemed to be sort of a reminder for any woman that was watching that there has been this ark of progress that woman may not necessarily always feel like they have everything that they want, but that it was important to keep in mind the progress that we are seeing on display play and particularly of course, will be on display tonight as kamala harris is trying to become the first woman, the first black and south asian woman to win the presidency. brianna right, mj priscilla. thank you so much to you both. let's talk a little bit more about all of this with our political experts. alex thompson to you first, she has more her jobs to do tonight than i think normally a candidate has or is she going to approach this? i mean, it's what happens when you inherit the democratic nomination for weeks before the convention, and you are famous, but not necessarily known. >> now i can tell you that over the past three-and-a-half years, some kamala harris aides have been very frustrated by the fact that they, when they tried to get her to introduce herself as in terms of her biography, she's often
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resistant. she's really preferred to stay on policy. now what i'm told is this speech is going to really lean in much more into her biography. you are going to hear the story about her mom. you're going to hear the story about how her mom's dream was to cure cancer. you're going to have maya harris her sister, introducer. they are as hundreds of millions of dollars are being spent on tv right now, trying to define kamala harris from both sides, you are going to really see them lean into her biography in a way they haven't before. now, in terms of immigration, you're going to see senator mark kelly speak tonight. arizona border state has been critical of the biden ministration they're going to talk about that border bill. now, of course, part of the problem is that they didn't really do much on the border, spend much political capital trying to pass a bill that first three years. so how do they thread that needle will be really interesting. >> yeah, what do you expect in karen? >> so a couple of things. number one tonight, it's going to be about vision and values. so talking about her story i'm talking about these experiences that's about her values, that's about that shared
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american value, about who we are as a nation where we're trying to go as a country and an america that is for everyone, it's often really hard for women candidates to talk about themselves because we're used to thinking. let's not talk about ourselves let's talk about the policy. let's talk about other people so i think i'm glad she's going to lean into some of that. but then also a vision, a vision, a about america's role in the world, about how to keep americans safe. this is a woman who has been battle tested over the last three-and-a-half years, both because she's faced attacks and because she has been in the situation room with president biden on some of those critical moments. obviously the border and immigration are important. but also an economic vision about how do you build the middle class and how do you continue to strengthen the economy? lower costs for americans. i would venture to say that it's going to be more detailed than we've heard from former president trump, who has given us lots of anger points and
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fear points. but let's meat on the bones in terms of other than mass deportations, what he would plan to do, but there will be a contrast. obviously, what do you think about that, david listen, i'd say madam vice president, if she's heard of it she's been in the job title is literally vice president if states he points out correctly, for the first three years, the immigrate did nothing on immigration we were just kept the remain in mexico policy that president trump had. >> you wouldn't have these current flow. >> mexico rejected it and i understand. >> i understand. hold on, care. it's my turn. you know, she's been the vice president united states she's not a potted plant. if she has these visions as she spoken up about them and the biden white us. why are they taking place now? she's had three-and-a-half years to implement her vision. she is a very powerful woman, currently so why hasn't she, at least wiseman, we've seen heard the tip of the spear on something. any of these issues, right? maybe the biden administration just relegated euro corner. i
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don't know. >> but the question is, all these policies you coming about now where have they been for the past 3.5 years? >> why today have a sudden epiphany? >> can i just mention number one, president biden? florida immigration reform proposal on day one, had trouble getting republicans to join in that effort. obviously, we know what happened and look part of the role of the vice president is to be someone who is in the room making suggestions, not necessarily out there. she's been obviously very out front on reproductive freedom and connecting the idea of freedom, our basic freedoms to both the 2022 election and this election. but she has been a leader on a number of issues. but your job as vp isn't always to be out front on that in front of the cameras, but to be leading behind the scenes. and so now she's able to talk more about what her role has been in some of these critical moments. and that's what allowed this is based on, i want to listen to a moment from last night.
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this is what bill clinton, former president bill clinton said sort of a little dig that he made at former president trump here it is. >> no, let's cut to the chase i'm too old to gild the lily two days ago, he turned 78, the oldest man and my family and, the only personal vanity i want to assert, is i'm still younger than donald trump david, do you think that the age thing for donald trump, i mean before, if you compared him to joe biden, it wasn't a problem. >> he's obviously a more spry man of sort of the age category. but now he's got a very young vice presidential running mate, and he's up against kamala harris, significantly younger than him it's going to be an issue. >> listen, i don't think so. i don't think i mean, look, he's very vigorous guy. age is a state of mind people aged different ages, different
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rates. the guy plays 18 holes of golf out every day. i've run up flights of stairs behind the man that you can bang on donald trump are lots of things being vigorous and sharp, probably not one of them energetic trump ban on his vigor. >> you see it being an issue. i mean, polls show that it is an issue. >> the fact is that there were always significant concerns about donald trump's age. the problem was they were much more significant concerns about joe biden's age. and you're going to see kamala harris really lean into this. that's why you're seeing the frame of past versus the future. and even though there been some concerns and democratic polling groups about this, we're not going back chant that has really become a rallying cry. you heard it last night. you're going to hear it on the trail. kamala harris has really leaned into this and they are really trying to present her sort of ironically, given that she is they've point out the vice president, i'd states they're trying to present her as the change candidate between a performer precedent, project 2025. i want to talk about this i don't know that sort of policy prescriptions from a
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conservative pac or conservative non-profit has ever gotten such a starring role at a democratic convention but our kaitlan collins is actually reporting that trump and his campaign have been particularly infuriated by how democrats have been tying him to project 2025, which she has disavowed. it's this kind of iliad of what a really transformational policy proposals for his second trump term outlined by the conservative heritage foundation. here is one moment where comedian kenan thompson actually higig these literal proposals. here it is she is an ob-gyn that delivers babies oh yeah. >> it's bad news, isn't it? >> it sure is on page 459 project 2025 resurrect a law from the 1800s called the comstock act to ban abortion nationwide and throw health care providers in jail he's a
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proud civil servants well unfortunately for you, on page 78 project 2025, calls for president trump to purge the civil service of everyone who isn't a maga, loyalist. are you a maga loyalist? >> now, kenan? >> absolutely not he said he didn't want to make assumptions trump. >> obviously, i said he disavowed. he's tried to distance himself at every turn from this, but do you think david, the democrats are effectively tying him to it? >> i mean, they're trying their best. i could tell you. listen, i was at the former president on saturday, had a discussion about this exact project 2025 document, and i cannot say what he said to me on this now even on cable, i can't tell you what he said about believed version, but i can't even give you the bleep version because he believed there be no words
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so strongly disavows it, and the people will put it together and the is because of how bad it is for him or because he actually think some of some of the ideas are crazy. >> in a lot of things that are crazy. this is a, this is a dream of a group of very conservative people of what the universe would look like if they if they were king and none of these things are going to come to pass that. some of these things isn't, there's always been a call and the republican party to kind of take a look at the civil service. they incredibly, you know, i always find it amazing it when you're in washington, dc and you hear non-essential personnel, please don't report for work. and don't think that means what you're making it. but i'm saying like who shows up like how does the government still run? or he's not essential personnel. so i think that's kind of what the republican party is. okay. can we streamline the federal government for the wealthiest counties in america surround washington dc. lot of very, very wealthy gs 15s, dual couples come out on his income. so i think we could streamline the government. i think that's a particular thing. the american people would like to
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see so that was a very valiant effort having written a piece for cnn.com about one of the areas in this problem for president, former president trump is that not only are former loyalists like stephen miller, part of it, but for example, the health care section that was written by a former trump aide hhs administration official, one of the end he wrote about exactly what kane and talk about. >> this is a piece i wrote about abolishing abortion and about how to use that law also to limit access to contraception and some other that might be sent through the mail. and so the problem and the reason it's been so hard, i think for trump to distance himself you've got former administration officials actually writing it and the groups that are out there selling it happened to be groups that are putting a lot of money into the trump election. they did so in 2020 and they will expect to be rewarded for those efforts. this is, we have to leave it there. >> unfortunately, hot topic
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we'll have to, we're going to hear lots more about it tonight. >> and in the coming days, i'm sure and weeks and months you guys thank you so much. really appreciate it. appreciate your reporting as well. we have much more of our special coverage live at the dnc ahead. we're going to speak to michigan senator debbie stabenow about what what harris needs to do to win her crucial battleground state cnn news news central brought to you by viking, exploring the world in comfort explore the world. >> the viking way. >> from the quiet comfort of elegance, small ships with no children and no casinos we actually have reinvented ocean voyages, designing all inclusive experience for the thinking person viking voted world's best by both travel and leisure. >> and condi nast traveler learn more at viking, don't
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at the democratic national convention in chicago, and not too far from where i am sitting. >> the critical battleground state of michigan is going to be looming very large recent polling shows kamala harris and donald trump neck and neck in the state date no clear leader, a state that joe biden, of course, flipped away from trump in 2020 after he had flipped it away from democrats in 2016 to beat hillary clinton. this is video from earlier today. it was a sit-in that was taken outside of the dnc by the uncommitted national movement that is sub according palestinians in gaza. this is coming after party officials told the group they're not going to get a speaking slot so obviously there's a lot that is going on in michigan that democrats are keeping their eye on. so we now have democratic senator debbie stabenow of michigan to talk with us about all of this. thanks for being with us. well, thank you. thanks for having me. >> thank you for being here. what do you want to hear from
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vice president harris that you think is really essential to winning over michigan voters. >> were there are a number of things. and it frankly starts with the economy and we've had the big things being done, rebuilding america moving to we bring jobs home as sin, but the everyday costs for people are still too high. and so what people want to know is how do you help me ford my house, what she's going to talk about, how do we do more on prescription drugs? i will do more on health care. how do we do more of my energy costs and so on? so people need to hear her story about growing up in a working class family. how she gets it and how she's going to be laser-focus. and then of course, in a place like michigan with huge diversity of every kind you can think of people need to feel their heard and that they're supported in our diversity. and that's something i feel very confident in michigan is, is it's always
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been kind of tricky here in recent years because of some of the realignment that we've seen of some, i think rank and rank-and-file autoworkers and some of the working class folks in michigan where they are deciding where they feel that they are most heard and now you have the uncommitted movement with democrats. >> how do you see all of this interacting? how do you see where harris needs to win people over, where she i can or cannot lose people. >> well, we are a wonderfully desert diverse and complicated state. i mean, we always have been and let me first say that the 33 delegates in the hall that are uncommitted of course, need to be listened to and heard. i appreciate that they've given them space for press conferences roundtables and meetings, and more certainly i know that they're looking at, so they're heard the larger question sort of on the economy and how you talk about union workers and over the years, what's happened for
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a long time, folks were really sold on trickle-down economics, which never got to the pockets of anybody in michigan. but in and policies that were taken jobs overseas. >> what i love about the biden-harris administration as that they're doing. >> we what we've been all talking about for years, which is you want to get tax cuts, then you're going to make the product in america, you're going to bring the jobs home. we're going to invest here. we're going to have my buy america provisions that i've tried to get passed under trump. he would never support joe biden immediately picked up and kamala harris says, oh, of course, of course you're going to take american tax dollars and put it into buying american products. so we're starting from a position, there's so much better. and then when you add to that they want people to have good union jobs. they're willing to put their convictions on the line and stand on the picket line and people know that they care about working people i want
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robert kennedy jr. he's having an event tomorrow. you've heard this buzz public private dialogue from his campaign about possibly dropping out and endorsed trump. what do you think that would mean for the race specifically in michigan, even if he's just pulling off some folks on the margin for trump i think his time has gone on, for me, i think it means less than i was worried about in the beginning, i thought there was going to be a broader impact it wasn't clear whether that was going to be his name and people on the left door was going to be his craziness and people on the right. it looks like he's gone for the craziness on the right. but i think in the end, they will have very little impact. what's going to have impact in michigan is enthusiasm and turnout. we've worked hard to get no, no, excuse. absentee balloting, which actually starts the end of september. we've worked hard to get nine days of early voting. i mean,
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we are laser-focused on getting people out and don't underestimate. and i'm sure you don't, but you know, the craziness and the hatefulness down trump versus the joy and moving forward. in this hall, donald trump was in michigan yesterday. he's had around him in michigan white supremacist carrying signs that say, we love hitler, we love trump people are exhausted. >> we know what more that i mean, it's awful so this is the place is going to bring joy and just finally, as someone who made history back in 2000, becoming michigan's first female senator. i'm sure watching a former fellow female senator make history tonight is a very big deal for you. >> it's huge you kamala and i became good friends in the senate worth a lot together on health care and mental health issues and so on. and i've worked with her as vice president and she's she's the real deal. i mean, she's totally prepared on the one hand, tough on the other hand
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empathetic and caring and connecting with people and it's pretty exciting to tell you. it's actually very exciting this whole week has been exciting for all of us. and tonight will just be the icing on the cake because they say, senator, we are grateful for your time. thank you so much and still ahead. we are you have some more news from the dnc plus securing a deal in the israel-hamas ceasefire talks. that's looking more grim. the u.s dispatching top officials to get a deal done. but what if it doesn't come through? we are live from tel aviv next for 150 years. 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 hi, my name is damian clark and if you have both medicare and medicaid, i have some really encouraging news that you'll definitely want to hear.
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ceasefire and hostage release deal in gaza, a source familiar with the negotiations says that cia director bill burns is expected to arrive tomorrow in cairo to attend a high level talks, which will take place over the weekend. >> hopes for a deal are fading though, as a major sticking point remains israel saying it will not leave the philadelphi corridor in southern gaza, regardless of any pressure to do so cnn's jim sciutto is live for us in tel aviv tracking the latest jim, what are you learning about where these talks stand? >> listen boris, it's really not good i mean, the talks are happening. there will be another meeting of officials in cairo, as you said in the us, is sending senior officials to take part. bill burns, the director of the cia, brett mcgurk top state department negotiator, often involved in these talks. so the fact that they're showing up shows that the u.s. is still invested and israeli negotiating team will
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be there as well. hamas does not take part in these talks in-person. they have mediators who convey to them where things stand. the talks are taking place but as you mentioned, israel is now publicly insisting on a presence at what's known as the philadelphi corridor. that is the border between gaza and egypt. and why that is of a concern, israel because there are all those tunnels underneath there that bring in arms. and the concern among israeli officials that only they can trust themselves to control that corridor today that had only been discussed privately as the possibility that israel is insisting on that. now the prime minister's office is comparing it publicly. that's a position u.s. officials is called as a called a maximalist position, not helpful the negotiations and what it speaks to is, and this is the way other parties view it, that israel wants to maintain a presence in gaza after this war, which is something going into these talks that even the u.s. was not comfortable with. so talks
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happening. but if that is the israeli position, it's hard to see how they move forward towards an agreement and jim, if there is no deal, what happens yeah. >> let's hit know my team and i we spent today up on israel's northern border where every day there is cross-border fire from hezbollah in southern lebanon and israel from israel into southern lebanon against him hezbollah targets been really a low grade war there since october 7 the concern is if the talks fall apart then that low-grade conflict on the northern border becomes hotter with perhaps hezbollah exacting this revenge. it's been talking about and sitting in the background is iran, which has publicly said it's going to seek revenge for the killing of ismail haniyeh in tehran. they seem to be saying they're holding off for some time. perhaps there's greater concern about hezbollah striking in the near term, regardless, the fear is if the talks go nowhere than the risk of that expansion of
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this war grows those higher and there's genuine concern about that in this country. and also in washington our thanks to jim sciutto live for us in tel aviv still to come on. >> cnn news central, we're just hours away from kamala harris formally accepting the presidential nomination. we're going to speak to campaign co-chair senator chris coons about what to expect from her primetime speech. when we come back this is the home for the world's most essential stories in journalism. and now, cnn has been recognized with the most emmy nomination you shouldn't have any organization this year cnn. >> good morning. >> with a lack good. >> good. good right now, collects q0 groupby for fast and gentle constipation relief. >> and as little as 30 minutes making your good morning even better with all lacks the wow incredible amazing my go-to is
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big night ahead. tonight for vice president harris, as she formally accepts the democratic nomination for president, she will be delivering a highly anticipated speech as voters here, her personal story firsthand and learn about how she would lead the nation if she wins in november joining us now is the harris-walz it's campaign co-chair, senator chris coons of delaware. >> sir. thank you so much for being with us. give us a sense of what we're going to be hearing from the vice president tonight. >> thank you brianna. thanks for chance to be out. i'm sorry. my voice is a little raspy. i did a lot of shouting last night as i got to hear from a governor, congressman, veteran and coach tim walz as he spoke, introducing himself to the broader nation and tonight i expect we're also going to hear an electrifying, an upbeat speech from vice president kamala harris. but we're view of her life story, of her record as an attorney
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general of the most populous state in the country, vice president serving alongside our beloved president joe biden. and now nominee to be the next president, united states excuse me, on the democratic ticket i think you'll hear about her vision for the future. her compassion for the middle-class, her concern about the proposals that have been made by her opponent and her hope that coming out of this convention will have an energized, engaged democratic party nationwide and it was a bit of a reality check we know that your co-chair, jen o'malley, dillon, that she told politico's eugene daniels, the harris campaign actually does not have a clear path to victory. >> she said, quote, we don't have it, we are a polarized nation in a challenging time and despite all the things that are happening in the country, donald trump still has more support than he has had at any other point. it is going to come down to every single vote how are you approaching that
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reality? check? how are organizers approaching that brianna, this was always going to be a close election. >> and in the last few weeks, what we've seen across the country as vice president harris and governor walz and barnstormed across the country to pennsylvania to michigan, to nevada, to eric arizona to all the different swing states, including wisconsin during this convention week, is more volunteers, more small dollar donors more folks expressing interest in the campaign and working to learn more about how the harris-walz ticket will improve our position at home and abroad but it's not news that jen o'malley, dillon recognizes that this is going to be a very close race vice president harris, as a candidate, has several different pathways to 270 which is an improvement over where we were a month ago. but bluntly, none of those pathways are a
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slam dunk in. none of those pathways. is it obvious that we're going to win? this will be a hard-fought and close contest. this november i do want to ask you about rfk junior because he is having an event tomorrow. you have heard the noise about this in public and private dialogue from his campaign about possibly dropping out and endorsing trump. i think that is very much what the expectation of this may be. what would that mean for the race which voters are you concerned might swing over to trump and how much of a difference could it make? >> brianna? i don't think that will make a very significant difference rfk jr. has struggled to get on the ballot in many states to deliver a message that breaks through with any significant number of voters there are folks who disliked vaccines or are vaccine deniers, or who shares some of but his issues and concerns of course, he has a running mate who has poured a fair amount of her money into
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trying to make their campaign a successful national campaign? he's dropping out because that effort hasn't succeeded. and so look, i think folks should pay some attention to some of the more extreme positions robert f. kennedy jr. has one of them is that he said that he would act to deny a single penny of funding to any public school that requires vaccinations of any kind? i'll just remind you that without a measles and mumps, vaccinations, we'd have widespread national pandemics of these childhood diseases that were largely eliminated due to effective vaccines that you're required to take if you're going to go to a public school. so look, rfk has got a whole bunch of different positions brains all over the place it's been hard to keep track of all of them but his opposition to vaccination is one of them. and i don't think the science or public health bears that out senator, i think it's fair to say i've saved my very most important question for last is beyonce coming
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tonight? i don't know that i believe pink is going to be performing tonight to the best of my knowledge, beyonce is not, but i don't know that. and so i'm looking forward to tonight with some anticipation as well. >> all right. wills it, senator coons. thank you so much for continuing the rampant speculation after that, we appreciate it so ahead, more from chicago, but first, we do have some breaking news out of arizona. what we are learning about a supreme court decision that could impact this election will have that next there's fall comedy u.s. coming to cnn. what could go wrong of i got news for you. >> for me or saturday, september 14th at nine on cnn. here's to getting better with age. appears to be nice to every thursday help fuel today
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on cnn we're following breaking news out of the supreme court where the court just blocked parts of a republican back law that could have prevented thousands of people from voting in november's election. cnn chief legal affairs correspondent paula reid is here to explain what the justices decided. paula this is a big case. this is one of the election cases that we've been following very closely. and here are the supreme court has said it will not revive citizenship requirements to vote in the presidential election in arizona, there may be some citizenship requirements to vote and state and local elections. but as you know, voter i.d. this is an issue that republicans we've tried to keep front and center for a long time and arizona is one of seven states and is expected to decide the outcome of the november presidential election. and this case, if it had gone the other way, it could have potentially impacted the ability of tens of thousands, maybe as many as 40,000 people to vote in the presidential election and boris, we're talking about a state that was
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decided by just over 10,000 votes in 2020. that's why the republican national committee made this emergency appeal to the supreme court. but this was an emergency appeal. this wasn't the usual kind of case where you have oral arguments and you get a lengthy decision. we just have this sort of short one-page decision and one of the things that you see on here it's an interesting alignment across the justices. usually there is a doctrine that they follow trying not to get involved in contentious disputes related to ballots too close to an election. but here, well, this was presented to justice kagan. you see that justices thomas alito and gorsuch would have just granted this request from the republican national committee. but justices sotomayor kagan, justice barrett, and justice jackson would have denied it and full so there is clearly a split across the justices three different ways of thinking about this, even though historically there has been a doctrine often embraced by conservatives, not to get involved in these kinds of disputes. so this is one of several cases that could have an impact on the election. we're watching very closely.
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>> yeah, we look forward to seeing what develops, what comes of the others paula reid. thank you so much for the update. still much more to come from the democratic convention. kamala harris is three main objectives for the biggest speech of her political life. we're going to look at what she's aiming to do as she closes out the dnc when we come back tonight, cnn is live from chicago as vice president kamala harris delivers her acceptance speech on the dnc's final night. jake tapper and anderson cooper leads cnn's special live coverage. the democratic national convention tonight at seven on cnn and streaming on back morgan stanley is partnering, but the women's tennis association to remove boundaries because this game is for everyone is your shower trying to tell you something is getting in and out of the bathtub becoming a safety concern are you worried about the cost of a bathroom
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off a historic week. >> hello, there. i'm brianna keeler the democratic national convention in chicago. and my good friend and colleague, boris sanchez is in washington and hours from now, vice president harris will be walking out onto the stage behind me to formally accept her party's nomination for president she'll be laying out her vision for america. and when she does, she is expected to be greeted by many delegates wearing white already seen them filter in here to the arena even hours before it's of course the color of the women's suffrage movement, a nod to harris potentially becoming the first woman to lead the country. and we're also learning some new details about harris schools with her speech tonight, cnn's eva mckend is with us now. tell us what you're learning. eva brianna, we know to the extent that she could be she has been hunkered down,
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