tv CNN News Central CNN September 2, 2024 5:00am-6:01am PDT
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died in this crash is under investigation listen to the ntsb right now, we have four different areas that we're primarily focusing on. and that is going to be on motor carrier safety itself mexican operator you're in the united states tire maintenance and occupant protection, which would be the use of passenger's seat belts one of the things that we do from here he is we actually come out and then try to advocate for recommendations of how to make the transportation system better job. we do know this bus left atlanta was headed to dallas. it was operated by a mexican bus companies. so you hear they're going to go through all the maintenance records and try to see exactly what was going on with this bus before it had that tire failure? and then went into that embankment enrolled. we do know that sometimes when you have speed and you have tire failure, it can be disastrous for people in the road obviously, they'll your heart goes out to the family members who are experiencing just tremendous loss after this rollover.
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>> all right. ryan young. thank you so much for that report. new hour of cnn, new central starts right now tiktok with 64 days to go the 2024 race enters a critical new stretch ahead of the pivotal presidential debate. >> donald trump, off the trail today and kamala harris hitting multiple battleground states, right beside her new top surrogate president biden and days away from his first nfl game, a rookie for the san francisco 49ers was shot during an apparent robbery attempt the latest on his condition and the teenager that is suspected of shooting him and millions expected to hit the roads and airports today as they head home from their fabulous labor day trips, we have the travel trouble spots for you. i'm sara sidner with john berman, kate bolduan is out today. this is cnn new central it, is labor
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day in saber day is the traditional kickoff of the election season. >> but you know what this election season is. so unprecedented, who knows, if any of the normal rules? why today, vice president kamala harris heads to michigan and pennsylvania, a new abc news ipsos poll shows harris ahead of donald trump by about six points among likely voters. >> in pennsylvania today, harris will be joined by president biden, who is re-emerging on the campaign trail this week, the president will also visit wisconsin and michigan, cnn's eva mckend is with us this morning with the plans for the harris campaign, eva, i see you are in detroit i am. >> john the vice president here in detroit on labor day to illustrate her support for union workers. >> she will argue that the
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biden harris administration has been the pro most pro pro-union administration in american history. and while we have seen republicans make gains with rank and file union workers truckers, largely with a cultural argument. she will maintain that it is actually democrats and by extension, her that champion policies that best represent union workers like the pro act that would extend a legal protections for employees trying to form a union. john michigan is such a critical battleground state president biden won this state by only about 154,000 votes in 2020, president biden going to join the vice president in pennsylvania after this detroit rally, we know that president biden is most comfortable in a union hall. biden only won pennsylvania in 2020 by about 80,000 votes. the vice president is trying to make this argument that she is principally concerned about the future while the former
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president it's concerned about the past, trying to characterize herself as a new candidate for a new era. that of course is a difficult argument to make, given that she is currently part of the administration. but we still see her embracing president biden in strategic ways. in ways that she believes that he will be particularly helpful and no doubt that is with union workers. we know that the vice president largely is going to hunker down for the remainder of the week as she prepares for next week's debate. but president biden is going to act as a key surrogate for her. not only in penalties so vga tonight, but also this week in wisconsin and in michigan, john. >> all right. eva mckend in detroit, one of the key scops tops today. thanks so much for being with us, sara. >> all right. and a potential preview of what we may see a next week's presidential debate, former president donald trump is making a bold claim about the federal election subversion case against him. it all comes just days after special counsel jack smith
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filed a revised indictment in that case, trump has a busy week ahead with visits planned to several battleground states. cnn's steve contorno is joining us now. >> tell us, firstly about these remarks that donald trump has made yes, sara, donald trump not only suggesting that this latest indictment, the superseding charges from special counsel jack smith, not only help him politically as what he said, but he said he had quote every right to interfere in the 2020 election. take a listen to this interview. >> it so crazy that my poll numbers go up whoever heard you get indicted for interfering with a presidential election where you have every right to do it you get indicted and you poll numbers go up elsewhere that interview he called vice president harris nasty. >> that's what that was the
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word he used in her previous debate with former vice president mike pence obviously an interesting choice of words there, given that mike pence is not endorsing donald trump in this election. and also what happened on january 6, 2021, when several of trump's supporters rushed the capitol. some of them saying, quote, hang mike pence. so that choice of words there is obviously stands out. i also want to walk you through a little bit of donald trump's week ahead going into this this debate, because as you said, he will be on the road quite a bit on wednesday. he will be appearing at a town hall in pennsylvania thursday, his election case has a hearing in washington, dc. just another example of how these legal charges continue to interfere with the campaign calendar on friday, he will be in north carolina carolinas speaking to the fraternal order of police, continuing to push this narrative that police are on his side over the democratic ticket and on saturday, he is holding a rally in wisconsin and there's more events planned over the weekend as well heading into that critical
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first debate on september 10, donald trump doesn't like to do this sort of normal debate prep that we're going to be seeing from the vice president this week. he likes to sort of have a rolling informal conversations with numbers, a number of advisers over the days leading up to it, they sort of just sort of spar on the fly and talk about issues not necessarily holding mock debates, like you see from other candidates, sara in well, it worked for him last time. we will see what happens this time. thank you so much, steve contorno. appreciate it. >> all right. here to talk about where we are, where we're going. but most importantly, why we are where we are and where we're going communications strategist and pollster frank luntz, frank, great to see you. i just want to start with one number from the new abc news ipsos poll. this is a poll, that shows him chris with a six-point lead among likely voters, a four-point lead among registered voters, but a gender gap that widened over the election among women. she was ahead by six before the election or before the convention, 13. now, in among men, she trails by five. now, she trailed by three. the shift
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among men statistically insignificant, but the shift among women pretty big why do you think and it's even bigger among younger women. >> women 18 to 34 generally see in her what they want to be themselves. they serious inspirational. they see her as someone who has the skills and the talents and the traits that they want to represent? older men have exactly the opposite reaction to her. and that's why older men seem to be with trump we're going to have the largest gender gap ever in modern american politics. and when you factor in age, that gap becomes even greater. >> so how do you run with that? if you know this, if you are the harris campaign or the trump campaign going forward, what do you do? do you drive your vote? >> you focus on your vote. you make sure that every single younger woman is registered. you make sure that they understand that they have to participate. it's not enough to support someone in this is to me the biggest change between before the democratic convention and after before younger when we're not
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energized, they were not engaged. they were not even planning to vote after the convention. they can't wait for election day so you have to keep up that momentum i put them behind her and all those rallies, did you see people standing behind? i make sure it's filled with younger women so they see people who look like them and it's a way to communicate that she cares about them. >> why then is president biden out with her today in pittsburgh and go into michigan and wisconsin. how much does that help? >> because it's his best state, even though he's from dell, even though he lives in delaware and now he's part of the pennsylvania culture particularly the paycheck to paycheck votes and notice, i did not say blue collar and they did not say working class. it is paycheck to paycheck because that's how they feel that densify is how they live. and it's 24% of the electorate. and joe biden can communicate to them. >> i did mentioned at the top of the show, labor day is the traditional kickoff to the campaign sees i don't know that that applies good morning, frankly, i'm not sure it's applied for the last few cycles, but we say it i mean,
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what is left to do and 64 days. >> oh, it's the debate is everything everything everything when the voters sees side-by-side, the two candidates and they listen to what they say, not just in the answers. it's the body language. is there contempt to someone fold their arms? do they look at the individual when they're speaking? do they seem presidential in their approach for trump can he keep quiet? >> can you actually listen to her response or does he have to respond to everything for harris? >> does she seem open-minded? does she seem willing to take in information, not just project each one of them has different goals for that debate, but each one in the end has to prove that they're ready, not just for that moment. but voters are thinking who don't want to represent me two years from now, three or four years from now. that's why biden had to step aside when he did and that's the challenge for harris right now. she did not do well in her presidential debate. she did not shy and now she has to prove she has the capability to
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do it and trump has to prove that he doesn't treat her rudely, obnoxious lee because he lost a lot of female voters in 2020 who would have voted for him over policy but we're not vote for him because of his persona. >> you know, one of the things i've never understood about donald trump is they, they really pushing this notion. oh, he doesn't do debate prep, he doesn't do he does debate prep. we know he does debate prep. he may not do formal mock debates in a room. or maybe he does and we just don't know, but why do you think it's so important for him to project that image of i don't care that much because in 2020, he was told by governor chris christie chill out you don't have to go for the jugular lead. president biden, speaker at the time vice president biden and he'll hurt himself and trump couldn't do it. he couldn't lay off he just had to go and if i was advising the campaign right now, which i do not i'd say to him that silence in some cases is the best language that silence because he has questions that he can ask that she can't
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answer why did inflation get so high in new york administration? what exactly are you going to do if your policies caused it? what can you do to solve it? and most importantly, are you better off today than you were four years ago? it's not my question. that was ronald reagan's question. if he asked that question plainly, he will be successful. i don't believe he has the ability to do so. >> let's nice to see you this morning. thank you very much. sara all right. >> new this morning, protesters packed streets of israel demanding the government immediately make a ceasefire deal and bring the remaining hostages home. in callable video of two ships colliding the border issue leading to this dangerous dispute. and travelers are felonies from the airports and the roadways today. you may need to live a lot longer for yourself to get home or just be super patient
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israeli american hersh goldberg-polin, his funeral is happening in just the next hour. cnn's jeremy diamond is live in tel aviv. jeremy, can you give us a sense of the situation they are still protesters filling the streets, there there certainly are. >> we are currently at that main intersection in central tel aviv. were last night, you saw hungry hundreds of thousands of people pouring into the streets expressions of grief, of frustration, of anger. the fact that there are still so many hostages left it's in gaza after the bodies of six hostages who the israeli military says were killed by hamas, were recovered over the weekend. and you can see protesters are once again coming back into the streets trying to make their voices heard. we are right by the israeli military's headquarters here, as well as where the government usually holds many of its security cabinet meeting. those meetings of course, have been critical to setting this government's policy which has decided to prioritize according to the words of many protesters here
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today, to prioritize the military aim ems, to prioritize maintaining control of that philadelphi corridor between gaza and egypt over securing a hostage deal. i spoke with one woman who was blocking traffic just a couple hours ago about who she blames for the current situation beyond politics, beyond everything, it's humanity. we feel that the whole the ministry of defense everybody in the army is now saying, we don't need to fight anymore. >> it's not about fighting is not about saving israel anymore. it's about politics to politicians wanting stay where they are. and matt is not a price for anyone should pay for his freedom. definitely not. 108 people have been there for 332 days now already and you can actually see behind me police are once again starting to push people back as they try and get to the central kaplan intersection in tel aviv.
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>> they, they are really trying to keep the flow of traffic going here, but the protesters are expected to grow in numbers. we are expecting that once again and tonight, there will be another very large demonstration in this very same area as people continue to demand that the israeli prime minister do what they believe so it's his duty. and that is to focus on the lives of israelis, the lives of the hostages are over anything else how is the netanyahu government responding are reacting to these protests other than obviously the police are there and trying to control the situation so far there has been no change in the israeli government's position. >> in fact, yesterday, following the recovery of those six bodies there was a very heated having a meeting and it was heated because of one man in particular. and that is the defense minister, yoav galant's, who has been insisting that the government should be prioritizing a the hostage deal more than it is. you want to reverse a vote that
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seems to have prioritize the control of that philadelphi corridor. i was just talking about over for securing a hostage deal, making it effectively a requirements in order to secure a deal that israeli troops maintain control of that area and he faced fierce pushback from the israeli prime minister, from other ministers aligned with the israeli prime minister who don't want to change the policy, who, who don't want to be seen as conceding anything for hamas in the wake of the killing of these six hostages. but again, tonight we will see likely thousands, perhaps tens, or even hundreds of thousands of people back in the streets and there is a sense that perhaps this moment will be different, that perhaps the bodies of these six hostages being recovered, that perhaps that will be the moment that things would change in this country for now though it hasn't jeremy diamond and excruciating really difficult situation for the families on both sides of this conflict dealing with war. >> i appreciate your time out there with the protests happening there in tel aviv.
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alright. also happening in gaza, a desperate effort to vaccinate more than a half million young children against disease that has been eradicated in most of the world polio and the shocking attack that for some nfl rookie off the field and into the hospital, new details on who's been arrested for shooting him tonight, a two-hour whole story speciaial the candidates and their record on the key issues of the election season. >> what does their path? as tell us about how they will lead the whole stotory with andersonon cooper totonight starting a at 8:00 on n cnn, wh nfl players s choose aslsleep a smarartphone. >> i i like to s sleep cold d a lilike it warmrm and cozy y and reallyly like it w when we botot whwhat we wantnt. >> numumber does t that have t cools s and warranants on eachce during ourur biggest s sale of yeyear, say 5050% on t the slee nunumber limitited editionon sm that and f freedom whehere wereu when y you add anyny base old de gentleman n super hydrdration, y
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world differently you, don't, want a special, night, live writing it eight on tnt right? new this morning, san francisco 49ers rookie ricky pearsall is out of the hospital and recovering at home after being shot in the chest during an attempted robbery, a suspect is in custody cnn's camila bernal is here with the latest camila. what are you learning on this hey john, so we know that ricky pearsall is now resting and
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recovering at home and on a facebook post, his mother saying that that bullet went in through his chest, out his back, but also saying that it missed vital organs. >> so he is expected to be okay. now, what happened here was that he was at union square in san francisco at 3:30 p.m. on a saturday, broad daylight, and he was alone and a 17-year-old approaches them to try to rob him at gunpoint. there was a struggle between the two of them. that gun goes off multiple times and hits both of them. that 17-year-old trying to run away, but was quickly arrested by police and now the district attorney in san francisco saying that she will make a charging decision either tomorrow or wednesday, but this will be in juvenile court because he's just 17-years-old. the thing though is that this incident really strikes the conversation and brings it back to the forefront in terms of the safety of san francisco. the many break-ins and shopping lifting incidents that they've had in this area. in particular and so the mayor london breed saying she
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acknowledges that this is a setback for the city. take a listen we are glad that the victim will be okay. but this incident does set us back from all the hard work that we've done in order to make significant changes in public safety in san francisco we still have the lowest violent crime rate of any major city we are on track to have record low numbers of gun violence in particular, in the city some of these numbers that she's referring to or from the city and then 2024, what they're saying is that property crime went down 32%. they say violent crime went down 14%, gun violence down 38%. so that's what she is referring to. but matt farrow, who's running against her in the upcoming mayoral election, saying essentially that enough is enough, and saying that there needs to be some sort of change. now, authorities in san francisco saying that he was not targeted for being a football player. it was just a
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robbery. but again, all of this bringing that national conversation back into the spotlight in terms of what's happening in san francisco, john, i look i'm glad he is okay. this morning, camila bernal. thank you very much for that. >> our new polls just enjoy growing gap in support between donald trump and vice president harris for a key bloc of voters women and a new warning from health officials as potentially fatal mosquito borne viruses are on the rise recipes s recips that a are more ththan their ingredieients recipes wrwritten hand andnd lost to t time can n be analyzed,d, is storeded usis ththe power ai reseserving memes and hehelp me to w write new soe
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union workers in a few hours, she will campaign in a key battleground state of michigan and pennsylvania with president biden joining her in pittsburgh as she makes this he makes which from candidate to top surrogate. meanwhile, the trump campaign is wasting no time responding to harris detroit visit. it's hosting a zoom call with the uaw members today, joining me now to discuss former congressman from pennsylvania, charlie dent and rachel palermo, former deputy communications director and associate counsel he'll to vice president kamala harris. thank you both for coming in this morning it's labor day. you didn't have to drive everywhere anywhere, hopefully. hopefully you're safe at home new polling out over the weekend. let's talk about this first from abc ipsos shows camila harris with a 52 to 46 lead with likely voters which isn't a whole lot different from the pre convention numbers, which was at 51 to 45. and harris's favor, rachel, what does this tell you? harris has to do because it does not appear that she got that bump that most people expect to
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happen after convention thanks so much for having me in the month prior to the convention, vice president harris completely turned the race around. she had galvanize voters across the country and gained support. and it's not only democrats have been supporting her, it's also some republicans and independents. and so the convention was a great time to tell her story but given the fact of how the polls are, it's going to be a tight race. and that's why she's taking nothing for granted. it's why she's going to two important states today. both michigan and pennsylvania in order to talk directly to voters. and she needs to keep that consistent campaign schedule which she plans on doing of traveling the country and really letting no stone unturned charlie you know, pennsylvania like nobody's business. what does she have to do there and what is trump doing there? that is working for him well, harris and biden are going to be in pittsburgh today at the annual labor day parade and it particularly in
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western pennsylvania, harris does need to explain herself on the fracking issue that is a very big issue out there, particularly among working class working voters. >> a lot of white working voters out there frankly. and she needs to do a better job explaining herself on that issue because in western pennsylvania, outside of allegheny county were pittsburgh is she's going to be beaten badly, so she's got to try to cut down those margins. and so she needs to do some explaining out there on the flip side, she's doing i think rather well in the philadelphia metro market yeah. medium market, where we're women's issues reproductive rights certainly resonate very strongly and i think she's got some advantages there. trump is going to try to, of course, run up the numbers in the rural areas and what we call the tea essential part of the state and across the top. and all the exurban areas. that's what he is going to do to trump is going to obviously he's going to pound away on inflation and on fracking. she's going to pound away on women's rights. >> and and, and of course
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january 6. so those are the advantages. so we'll see how this plays out, but it's very tight and pennsylvania make no mistake think about it. >> we've seen donald trump himself sticking out some different, and perhaps confusing positions on the issues surrounding reproductive rights and abortion just from your perspective, charlie, what you've been hearing from him, i know that some conservatives are with him about his, his sort of waffling on this issue but there is the general public that was very unhappy with the ending of roe versus wade. what do you see? why is he doing this? what you, what do you see his strategy is here? >> well, i think voters are experiencing whiplash from donald trump on the issue of abortion. they just can't quite figure out where he is. >> i think trump's real problem is you understands he has an enormous vulnerability as a jeep gop writ large on reproductive rights and abortion. >> i was last house republican to vote in support of reproductive rights. and i can
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tell you right now that his position is unpopular. >> he knows it, and so he's going through these gymnastics to try to demonstrate that he he said he's trying to sound like he is almost pro choice, which he was before he was a presidential candidate. >> but of course, he's, he's a bad messenger because he's he's the one who's boasted in bragged about overturning roe v. wade, which of course has led to the erosion or loss of reproductive rights for many women in many states. so trump just can't seem to find a position. they consistent position, frankly, the whole gop has been having problems post post-dobbs, how to message this issue? is it a state issue? is it a federal issue? >> and they just can't get out of their way. trump has disappointed in anger many of the pro-life and evangelical communities they're mad, they're saying he's unprincipled. well, yeah, he's a transactional guy. >> they knew that. >> now they're having to do with it and totally speaking of the transactional nature of this, he he has said that he thinks insurance and he was going to have insurance pay for ivf i am curious what you make
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of that, rachel hearing that from trump and his republican colleagues things have really lambasted that idea. >> but the public may like the idea of insurance having to pay for ivf. what are your thoughts you think with this what we need to do is take a step back and think about the fact that donald trump put up three justices on the supreme court with the intention that they would overturn roe v. >> wade. and they did this happened two years ago. and since then abortion rights have been taken away from women in states across this country. >> but there's other rights that have been taken away to one of those is in vitro fertilization before roe v. >> wade was overturned, women in america weren't talking about, am i going to still have access to ivf? the reason why this is even a question because of donald trump. and there's only one candidate running who thinks that women should be able to make decisions about their own bodies, but also about when and how to start and grow their families and so the contrast is very clear on this
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issue, and i think any conversation otherwise from donald trump is a distraction from the fact that he's the person who took away these it's rights in the first place all right. >> charlie, i do want to ask you about something donald trump said over the weekend, he, during an interview said that he had every right to interfere in the election. of course, you have a legal right and they exhausted all of those and the courts went against them in every single turn, 60 different courts does this hurt him? this is helping him with his base and hurt him with independents and others or does it do anything? is it just another donald trump ism well, no, i think that the fact that trump continues to say he had the right to interfere in the election is a big net negative for him, particularly among swing voters, independent voters. >> yeah, sure. among the most ardent bag of voters, this is does great news for them but for everybody else, they're looking at this in questioning his judgment. once again, i mean, again, as a former elected official, i can assure you that if i ever picked up the phone and call it a county election official and said, hey, i need 2000 votes just
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enough, deliver them to me or caught on tape. i would have been investigated and prosecuted. and that's what he did essentially with brad raffensberger down in the state of georgia. so i think this is a huge net negative. of course, he had the right to litigate what he considered to be election irregularities and states, but he did. he lost dozens of times and now he continues to fight that battle. it's a losing battle for him. and it was a losing battle in pennsylvania. josh shapiro, just hammer doug mastriano over that and abortion rights, if i were harris i take the shapiro playbook in pennsylvania on the election denial all right. for me, i suppose that internally dent for us from pennsylvania and rachel palermo appreciate you both for coming on this morning. john all right. >> we are midway through the labor day travel rush this morning. if you are on the roads, good luck. you can see the national average gas actually it's the shoulders, 333 a gallon, about 17 million people expected to pass through the airports by wednesday, cnn's pete muntean live this morning at reagan national
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airport how many people have passed behind you so far to more that makes how many you know the line is dying, down a little bit, john, we're through the biggest part of the morning rush here although this is so big because it's the last opportunity there the folks have to get away for the summer after what has been a huge summer for air travel. >> in fact, the biggest summer ever for air travel, about a core billion people 50 million people pass through tsa checkpoints between memorial day and labor day today is going to be one of the big as they're anticipating, 2.66 million people at airports nationwide. friday was even bigger than the forecast. tsa thought that 2.8 million people would pass through airport security pretty checkpoints nationwide. the number was actually 2.9 million people. the good news here is that cancellations and delays have remained relatively low. they really haley peaked on thursday
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when bad weather moved through the mid-atlantic. want you to listen now to passengers we talked to you at the beginning of this rush. they said, they were going to take all of the snags and snarls in struggling not really a redo this. >> i'm regulars or child for work and for leisure and family all the time. so and coming in here and seeing that is not the crowd in traffic was pretty light so if i had any problems, they went away. >> all right. yes. so we'll see how monday looks today. those good i'm glad i'm going to play it tomorrow. we'll see how my nature is one thing that tsa says you will see more of something that is new for this labor day travel rush is facial recognition technology now, at more and more airports, it was a small test for a while. >> now it has expanded to about at airports nationwide. you've seen the scanners probably at what's you put your driver's license in the machine, the camera on the machine matches
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your driver's license photo with the line photo, they say its way more accurate than a human when doing that check. so that is that more and more airports right now on the idea is that get you through security a little bit faster. the numbers here at the terminal two, north checking zero point at reagan national airport about five five minutes or less to get through standard screening and tsa precheck right now, that's down from the peak we saw earlier. people were waiting about 20 minutes in line, john. >> all right. well, 20 minutes. that's too long, but i liked the five to eight much better. how are the roads this morning so far? >> the traffic will be bad today. john, because there are still people working and aaa says the confluence of afternoon commuter traffic and people coming back from the shore or vacation destinations that will make things a big mess. in fact, here in the dc area they're saying on the bw parkway to tu-95, doing baltimore and washington traffic will be 40 times
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greater, sorry, 40 40% greater than the norm, around 315 this afternoon. so you really have to plan ahead the best time to leave before 10:00 a.m. this morning or wait until after 8:00? pm tonight, according to aaa, john, the roads will be bad, don't sugarcoat. things, pete, tell us like it is. thank you very much for that as who is great to see this morning, a health warning summer may be coming to an end, but the risk of mosquito borne viruses is not more bad news, sorry, cnn's meg tirrell joins us now with some tips on how you can protect yourself and your loved ones let's start with eastern equine encephalitis it's a whole mouthful. >> this early. what is the latest? update on that? because it's deadly, it can be definitely so this is scary and a lot of us haven't really heard about this too much, but we have had six cases and five states so far this season and unfortunately, mosquito season goes until the first frost wherever you are. >> and so we still got some time before we get to that cold
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whether this mostly has been concentrated in the northeast, there has been one case in wisconsin in terms of the human cases and one death in new hampshire, this is a virus that is spread by the bite of an infected but mosquito, very rare. they're an average of 11 cases have been reported each year in the united states, where it six right now that we know about in the rare cases where this travels to the central nervous system and affects the brain. it can be fatal in about 30% of cases. and people who survive it often have ongoing neurologic nicole issues. most people, if they get infected, it doesn't cause disease. but in those cases it's quite scary. there was a 41-year-old man in new hampshire who died from this just recently. and so the ways to protect yourself, same way you protect yourself against any mosquito where an epa registered repellent. so that includes something like deep for piccard and you can go on the epa's website and find ones that definitely work, wear long sleeves, shirts, pants to treat your clothes with permethrin. check your house or
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you're surrounding area where you live for water out side because that's where mosquitoes breed and it can get really bad. use screens on your doors and windows and avoid being outside from dusk to dawn because that's when mosquitoes primarily bite. and we've even seen some towns in massachusetts momentum curfews or closing public parks because they want to try to protect folks when mosquitoes are biting the most. >> i don't know why it works, but skin so solve after for some reason, like as a kid that really worked for me, yeah, mosquitoes love me. they're the only thing that really, truly loves me how do you, how do you deal with west nile virus is similar way. west nile virus is actually the most common when mosquito borne disease in the united states. and it's much more widespread if you look at a map of this, you can see it's really across the us and texas has been hit particularly hard. we haven't hearing a lot about this because dr. found it was itized for west nile virus. this still is not a particularly common diseases and i've been hearing from mosquito control experts, it's not actually necessarily a particularly bad season even yet we've had fewer than 300 cases reported in the us. typically we see between
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10003000 total. we're still in season until that fraass comes, everybody protect yourself from mosquitoes and ticks to wait for the frost got things that resilient oh, i know it's pumpkin spice season we are well aware. thank you so much. meg tirell. i appreciate it. >> john. >> it's not just mosquitoes that love you. don turtles love you alright, this morning, the streets of israel flooded with protesters demanding a ceasefire after the murder of six hostages in gaza. and justice ketanji brown jackson probably sports implementing a code of ethics for the supreme court tonighght. >> a a two-hour whwhole ststory spspecial. the candidates and te record on the key issues of the election season. what does their past tell us about how they will lelead the whohole st with andersoson cooper t tonigh startiting at 8:0000 on cnn fro meet freree monday to susunday
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justice ketanji brown jackson has expressed support for a binding code of ethics because it bream court on 60 minutes, she stated such rules are pretty standard for the federal judiciary. >> justice jackson also noted that there is no clear reason why the court should be exempt from these dams and china and the philippines trading blame after their ships collided in the south china sea, both see the other deliberately ram the vessels this is the latest on long run running an escalating tension between the two countries. this morning, new aerial attacks from russia on ukraine, just as children are returning to school ukrainian officials say the strike involve accommodation of cruise and ballistic missiles and attack drones. ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy express gratitude with the quote, everyone who was made the school year possible, including teachers in those helping to defend, you ukraine. >> sir. all right. this morning, a massive effort is underway in war-ravaged gaza to vaccinate hundreds of thousands of children against polio. we reported the devastated family whose child now has the disease
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seen as not a machine? here joins us now not how successful or unsuccessful was the day trying to vaccinate so many children we've had from the un agency for palestine refugees describing the first day of the vaccine rollout as success, it seems to have gone as tanf for the first day. >> and according to the world health organization's some 87,000 children were vaccinated against so on that first day of the vaccine rollout. so a significant sign of progress there. but of course there is a huge challenge ahead for the un and for those medical workers on the ground, if we just take a look at the figures at the un says it is aiming to vaccinate some 640,000 children under the age of ten in the gaza strip that are quite stick around just over 90% of children under the age of ten, women the enclave and of course this is taking place across 12 days, three, three-day phases, which are essentially going to be
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carried out between september 1, the timber 12th, at the first phase, that three-day phase focusing on central gaza, we saw vaccinations taking place in deir el belah yesterday. that second phase, focusing on southern gaza and then the third and final phase. i think on northern gaza. and of course, what is crucial here is during these three three-day phases, there has been a call for a three-day pause in fighting from both sides. of the conflict, taking listen to this message from the un agency for palestine refugees yesterday about the significance and the importance of this pause in fighting it's been an extremely complex vaccination campaign. probably one of the most difficult we've seen in the wild we have had ongoing stopped this morning it's quite quiet now. we're hopeful that this will last throughout the campaign this is very critical because we simply cannot vaccinate so will john, while they are running for their lives and this is a message we've been hearing, of
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course, around humanitarian operations in general and goals the need for a cessation of violence to fully operate these humanitarian campaigns. >> but clearly a sign of progress there a lot of hope for the future. the next couple of days of this vaccine rollout across the gaza strip. >> sara just tells me so much about the humanitarian crisis that's unfolding there. polia, most so you're radek catered in the world and now there are instances of it. there in gaza. thank you so much. nada bashir, for your reporting on this. john outrage in israel this morning for the murder of six israeli hostages inside gaza. >> huge protests on the street this morning with us now is abbey on, she has a family member currently being held hostage and two others who have been killed. abby. thank you so much for being with us this morning. you posted on instagram the deal could and should have saved them why did you write that? and what did you mean one, thank you for having me into i had five members of my family who are
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impacted on october 7 carmella, dan, and noya were murdered. >> ofer kalderon, who is 53 and still being held and his two children were returned in november because of a deal it's been nine months since that deal and that deal brought home more than 100 people in the nine months since we've only seen eight people rescued we know that a deal is the only way to bring the 101, 33 of whom are not alive home. we need every single one of them and we need them home alive. we see how immediate and urgent this is as we mourn, the six people that were executed just days ago, they managed to stay alive for 330 days, only to be executed we need them all home now and i think a deal is the only way your cousin ofer as you noted, is still being held given that he is he is still there. >> how did this just this horrible news of the murder of these six hostages? how did
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that affect you and your family? >> i honestly i think in the aftermath of october 7, i felt somewhat numb because of the numbers of people that were murdered. and tortured and taken hostage. and 300. 332 days later we know their names and their faces and this felt so personal and so devastating to have walked by their posters for the last 11 months to know their families, and to know that they were living just days ago, only to be executed in cold blood they could have been brought home that three of those six were on the list of the current deal that was on the table to have been brought home in the first phase. and that just feels unbelievable, unreal. there was something tangible that there was almost in our hands and another deal almost happened. and to know that they were murdered when they could have been home alive
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with their families who do you blame humanity? >> right now, i feel, i feel like i've tried to be optimistic and hopeful this whole time. i think it would be disingenuous if i said that i wasn't angry at netanyahu and the israeli government. i feel that the hostages are being betrayed and abandoned. but at the same time, half 1 million people took to the streets last night in a democratic protest to say that we want a deal, we want the hostages home. but as an american, i'm looking to strong leadership around the world world. i'm looking to biden, i'm looking to all the countries that are sitting at the table to be bigger. leader is going to have been in the last 11 months, all of them, this is something that they can make happen and i'm also angry, of course, at just an awful terrorist organization. >> they are the ones that stole these people. >> they are the ones that have held them captive and they are the ones that executed them i
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have a lot of anger right now. i think understandable and justified just very quickly, your view of the protests that have been going on the last day? i think they are democratic. i think that this is a country that makes its voice heard when something is important to it and you saw half 1 million people take to the streets. >> they want the deal they were not out there last night in any sort of violent form. they were out there stinging hatikvah. they sing our national anthem. they sing for hope. even in our worst and our hardest and our saddest moments. this is a country that believes and hope and believes that if they raise their voices loud enough, we can bring the 101 home. and we can end the pain for the region. the region is in trauma right now, every one of us, whether you're in israel or you are in gaza. and the pain needs to end and bring the hostages home with a deal will help that happen heavy own. >> we appreciate you being with us. this warning
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