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remote diocese in the whole world so i mean, a man of 87 to go to a place of 98% humidity and heat. i mean, it's rather remarkable, but he just believes go to periphery, go where people are. and as a catholic population there, that he wants to shore up and say, even though you may may be in a minority, you're not forgotten, especially by me. >> it's pretty incredible because of his aides, because of his health. are you worried about him going on this long of a trip? >> i always worry about him, i mean, when i look at him and he's at 87 and he'll be 88 in december. he is frail and yet what that smile and his i mean, he has this energy bout him even in his frailty that says, i am a man about a mission he really believes inter-religious dialogue. the environment piece, the ukraine right now. i mean, these are important
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issues, tim so when you see that kind of inspiration, or he gives that kind of inspiration, i say, i don't know. i hope he has a few more years left in it because we need him we need people like him speaking, peace and dialogue, rather than all of the dissension that we've been seeing in the world there with a whole lot of that in the world, father edward beck, you never bring that dissension to the set, so we so appreciate it. thank you for being here this morning. great seeing you, sir. >> john ght. >> breaking news you're just getting word. i'll be russian. strike in ukraine that has killed dozens, hundreds might be injured. we have new information just coming in in rogers, take your mark. the campaign sprint to the finishes on what donald trump is trying this morning after previous attacks on vice president harris did not seem to work and four people killed on a subway train, apparently while they
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were sleeping. >> i'm john berman with kate baldwin and sarah seidner. >> this is the show you have been waiting for in a new sexual labor day was so yesterday. now is the sprint to the finish in the presidential campaign in this morning there is a whole lot of new, new proposals coming in from vice president harris and her economic plan new tv ads targeting the middle-class, a new bus tour on abortion rights, a new defense against donald trump, who we might add is newly on the attack as we fight to move forward down, trump is trying to pull us backward america has tried those failed policies before and we are not going back
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alright, let's get right to cnn's priscilla alvarez on the post labor day push. >> good morning. priscilla good, morning john look, this is a push that's going to include two of the top issues for this campaign and for voters, the economy fine-tuning their messaging. there. and reproductive rights. now on the economy, the vice president usually pull slightly behind former president donald trump. and this is an issue that they know they have to make inroads on because it is top of mind for so many voters. and what we have seen is the vice president tried to fine tune that messaging, particularly focusing on affordability. and that is what they tried to do in an ad released today. >> she'll make groceries more affordable by cracking down on price gouging. and she'll cut housing costs by taking on corporate speculators middle-class families, build america, we need a leader who has they're back now, this is part of a 370 buy.
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>> that's going to be between labor day and election day. so this certainly being aggressive on the airwaves. but in addition to that, it's hitting the trail and what we saw yesterday was president joe biden, who has had appeal with labor groups and union workers with the vice president, it was their first campaign event in the crucial commonwealth of pennsylvania. and that is where they again are trying to appeal and boost the ticket on the economy. this of course, a place that former or sorry, president biden only won by less than two percentage points in 2020 plenty, but also a place where he had made the shift from candidate to surrogate are ready. >> you're like come on, harris, our next president your
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are you ready to make donald trump a loser again? >> now president biden will be heading to wisconsin and michigan as well in the next few days. of course, the campaign sees that he could help in the blue wall states, all states that he narrowly won in 2020. now the vice president is also hitting the trail. she'll be going to new hampshire tomorrow. we'll show they'll more economic proposal. she teased some of this last week saying that she wanted to propose tax credits for small business startups. so the focus tomorrow will again be on innovation and entrepreneurship. but again, john, we're a week from that debate between the vice president and for former president donald trump. and they are going into it by focusing on the economy and the reproductive rights tour, which also kicks off today with surrogates, elected officials, and the campaign says celebrities along the way. >> all right, priscilla alvarez tracking all this for us, priscilla, great to see you. thank you and all of this comes just after harris was in battleground, michigan
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yesterday campaigning for union support alongside michigan's governor gretchen whitmer. look, if your most famous line is you're fired. you sure as hell don't understand workers, right the, words, i want our next president to say to workers whomever she might be i've got your back joining us, right now is democratic governor of michigan, gretchen whitmer. she is the author of the new book about her life and political career, and much more called true gretch. it's good to see you, governor. thanks so much for coming in. so the vice president is going to ride it out more of more detail on her economic agenda tomorrow. are correspondent priscilla alvarez was just talking about that and just this weekend. we saw a new take on how voters are feeling nationally about the economy and this new national poll from abc news shows that more
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americans still say they trust donald trump over kamala harris to handle the economy 46 to 38 why is that you know what i think that we all know about soon as you get past labor day, kids are going back to school, people are starting to re-engage in the national conversation about elections we know what that, whether it's reproductive rights or it is the economy keeping more money in people's pockets kamala harris has an agenda that supports americans who want to just get ahead or make decisions about their own health care and their bodies and their families. >> i think that now voters are going to start tuning in more. they're going to be asking themselves who's really putting a plan on the table that is going to make my life better all donald trump offers is anger and grievance, whereas kamala harris has actual plans will help people keep more money in their pockets. she's got receipts because she's been on the front line of the fight to bring down the cost of insulin or just to protect a woman's ability to access health care this is a stark
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choice in front of us and i'm confident that as voters start to get more engaged in this upcoming election, that they'll see kamala harris's agenda is about making their lives better. and donald trump's about making donald trump's life better and governor, it's not just nine weeks, i think to the day is election day. >> you have absentee ballots going out being mailed out in north carolina this week pennsylvania, early voting starts in two weeks. so how much time does kamala harris have to make that case? because it's even shorter than all the way to election day. i mean, is she running out of time? >> oh, no, i don't think so at all. but we're making use of every minute of every day as you saw, she and tim walz who are out there working their sharing the message of how do we make people's lives better in this country? how do we recognize? workers who just need a fair deal so that they can get ahead and take care of their families and keep more money in their pockets. so we're working hard i i don't
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even know where donald trump was yesterday. and as we talk about understanding the average americans life we got two candidates who worked hourly jobs have scraped to get ahead, have gotten live their version of the american dream versus a guy who was, who was born on third base and thanks, he had a triple. this is i think a really stark choice between people who actually get it, who live our lives and want to make more people into more people have a path to prosperity versus a guy who just, who hasn't and doesn't get it. and here's about winning an election, not necessarily what he's going to do once he does i think this is such an important moment. >> when you talk about who gets it, who doesn't get as ryan me, you've align in your book that you say, if there is, make sure if there's anyone motto, i live by in my political career. it's get stuff done. you put it slightly differently, of course in terms of what harris is promising to
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get done, is to improve the lives of the middle class. we've heard that in michigan, i want to play for you with that in mind, what j.d. vance said on cnn about her promises to get things done if she wants to tackle the affordability crisis or closed down the southern border, she should be doing it now and i think it takes a lot of shame, shamelessness, i should say, to be able to stare at the american people's eyes and say, i'm going to fix your problems now what i've already been in power for three-and-a-half years how do you make the case that you're going to get stuff done if you have three-and-a-half years that you haven't gotten it done, does he have a point 0.0? >> my gosh, when you look at just even in j.d. >> vance is hometown, a steel mill that is now thriving that was on the precipice of closing under trump's last term. it's thriving now because of the harris and biden worked, make sure that we are onshoring supply chains. this is about american manufacturing. and
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when you look at it, jd vance's own state, how much people have benefited good paying jobs we're seeing that here in michigan she again and across the country, the resurgence of american manufacturing is thanks to biden-harris administration. is there more good work to do? absolutely. but for j.d vance to show how little he understands the role of a vice presidency, i think is very revealing and exactly why we need lead peterson understand the jobs and can get stuff done and make our lives better. >> you also write a lot about the, all the, all the points in your political career and kind of the models for your campaigns when you were an underdog, when you were not and what you faced throughout your life and your in your, in your political career, the challenges you faced. the next challenge at for kamala harris is this debate. next week with donald trump. where do you set expectations? who is the better debater? >> well, if, you know, if your
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if you're grading debates on facts and vision, there's no question that it's going to be kamala harris i can tell you the end of the book. i talk about being a happy warrior and that was advice i got about debate prep when i was running for governor the first time if anything, i think the world has seen at the dnc and in kamala harris and tim walz they are happy warriors. they're people who care about one another and care about all of us. want to solve problems. they're tough and they're not going to go down into the pit with you know, all the ugliness that's coming from the other side. and i think that's what i want to see. i think that's what my kids wanted to see. i think that's what americans deserve. happy warriors. and i think that's exactly what we'll see in that debate. and i'm looking forward to it. >> will all see it together. governor. good to see you. thank you for coming on. >> sir. thank you all right. >> thank you, kate. we are following breaking news for you. dozens of people are dead after a russian airstrike on a military facility in ukraine and there's nearly 200 people
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that have been injured. we have a live report from key for you up next, also, an urgent search for three missing people after all high-speed boat crash off the coast of connecticut and are reported confession in a deadly shooting of a former louisiana mayor and his daughter. police say the assessment but is just 10-years-old saturday,y, syscal seen is tataking a brereak from breaking n news to airir. >> havave i got nenews for youo >> brereaking newsws. i'm m geta sandwichch. >> we neneed to talklk about wh constititutes breaeaking news.s providide got newsws for you. >> thehe mere saturday, septembr 14th at nine on cncnn and strereaming nextxt day on mamax >> everybobody wants supuper ststraight, susuper white e tet they want t ththat hollywowood smsmile, new cenensored in c cll whwhite providides two shahades wewetter teethth and 24/4/7 sene yoyour productction. i thinknk'a great product. it's going to help a lot of patients i am tony hawk and like many y of yo,
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has some breaking news coming in. this is that a ukraine at least 41 people have been killed, nearly 200 more are reported wounded after a russian missile tack on a military educational facility in central ukraine. let's get over to cnn's fred pleitgen. he's gathering more details for us from ukraine. fred, what are you learning? >> hi there, kate. yeah, this is obviously all coming into us, right? as we speak, a lot of new information coming in, a lot of fresh information that ukrainians literally just coming out with that you mentioned some, some of it, at least 41 people have been confirmed to have been killed about 100 180 wounded in this the attack that happened in central ukraine in the city of poltava in a military educational facility. and what we're getting from the ukrainians as they say that the telecommunications being it's the to of that facility, the building of that was partially destroyed. the ukrainians are saying, and this is the defense ministry that apparently there was an air raid alert, but the time between the alert and the actual two missiles impacting the site was so short that people were still on their way
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to air raid shelters and were obviously very much caught off guard. and that is why you have this very high toll of people who were injured. and of course people who were killed as well. the emergency services. okay. we're pretty quick to be on the scene. the ukrainian say and were able to rescue 25 people, 11 of whom were trapped underneath the rubble. as you can imagine, a lot of that operation is still very much going on the ukrainian president has come out and ripped into the russians for this attack. but we don't yet have kate is anything from the official russian places, the russian government or the russian military. there plus however, a very prominent russian military blogger who did come out and say that in fact the russians had attacked this facility in central ukraine. this of course comes as the russians have really stepped up, their missile attacks on a cities really around ukraine. one of the things that we had a couple of days ago was a big attack here in kyiv we have attacks happening in kharkiv in the northeast of the country, pretty much on a daily basis. that is something that the ukrainians are dealing with
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very frequently however, this specific attack is definitely one we're the toll is freely higher, higher than we've seen anywhere in the past months, kate yeah, absolutely. >> has. >> fred. thank you so much for being there and your reporting as always. thanks. sara. >> all right. new this morning, pressure is intensifying on israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu to make a deal to bring home the remaining hostages from gaza as he stays defiant overnight, protesters gathered outside the prime minister's home and lit fires amid mass demonstrations. >> over the killing of six hostages at the hands of hamas. the mother of one of these hostages delivered a tearful eulogy at his funeral yesterday if there was something we could have done to save you and we didn't think of it. i'd beg your forgiveness. we tried so very hard, so deeply in desperately. i'm sorry now, my hersh i asked for your help as we transform our hope into grief in this new unknown
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brand. >> pain another talking to her dead son most shaye lobbies brother in law, omer neuron, is still being held hostage in gaza since he was taken captive. >> on october 7 and year joining us now this morning. thank you so much for being here. i know it's really hard to listen to these families and what they're going through. but how have you been able to deal with this and have you heard anything about the status of your brother-in-law yeah. >> thank you for having me. it is very difficult to hear rachels words we did families of hostages of learned to know each other so well over the past year now unbearable to say that 11 months and so we feel that any last hostage, those who were murdered by hamas, is part of our family we are doing our best to keep strong, to hold on to the hope that we can still make a difference. but as
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the war prolongs, as negotiations does not seem to lead anywhere, we are starting to lose the hope that we had only a few months ago. >> it's horrible. it's been what, 323 days, i think now that the hostages have been held, that this war has been going on you gazan in rubble, hamas is still there. israeli forces are still there. do you see any hope in the number of people out in the streets this looks a lot different than what was happening in the beginning because there were demonstrations throughout this since october 7, but this seems different. do you think this is a potential game changer will potentially change netanyahu and the way he's thinking and he's easy negotiation on one hand, it is a lifting to see the images from israel. i was last there in may on demonstrations are rallies than were very different. the numbers were much smaller. and
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so this gives us some kind of motivation that and understanding that israeli public had enough of the sabotage of the negotiations but by so many different parties including own government and so that gives us kind of hope that perhaps we can make a difference. perhaps we crossed the rubicon with brutal murder of those six hostages, but he's will be too late for them. we have to ensure that it's not late for the other 101 hostages who still remain captive. many of them are still alive. and so i hope israelis will keep going on the streets, keep demanding, but also need other public's around the world to demand their own government to do more for the hostages who are held captive by hamas to pressure hamas. i think the u.s. administration of completely failed in using its leverage on qatar since the beginning of the war, using its leverage on turkey, on iran, on so many
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others who are sponsoring funding or involving hamas and the internet, entire international community failed us as well. the families of hostages by emboldening hamas. but we are, we are holding our government accountable. we want to make sure our prime minister is frank and honest with us. we are not feeling east sincere. and so that's why so many israelis are angry we don't want to go into streets in the middle of the war. it's so conflicting to do that because what happened on october 7 cannot happen again we cannot normalize hamas. we can cannot normalize hostage-taking. but there are no other avenues for us to show up frustration, to show anger with the lack of sincerity that we believe is part of this current government, do you think that netanyahu is in a position to really get this deal done do you think that some of what he has done has harmed the possibility of a deal i think on one hand, israel principally agreed as u.s. >> do some restriction said
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countless times to the deals that are on the table. on the other hand, there are things that are not obvious to the american public that oversees the israeli public things that are said in hebrew. statements that are being stated anonymously by prime minister. and now pile by his close associates that are harming the negotiations so yes, principally israel is negotiating. i think it is trying to find a deal, but i also have a sense of ben, prime minister once and now has a dr. jekyll and mr. hyde kind of complex. and so while he really wants to bring on the hostages, he really wants to progress with the negotiations and agrees in english to terms of agreements that are difficult for us to process. when he returned. so when he consult with his most radical ministers you ease too frightened to actually take it forward. i don't know if hamas will agree to any deal that is on the table. their goal is to survive. and i think their goal is also to create a regional
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conflict that has been failing and do that to an extent. but they're still trying. i don't know if they'll agree to a deal, but i need my policymakers to show me that they are doing everything they can. and if they can't do it, they need to go out to the public and say there are other interest that are overriding a deal that will save the hostages. and you have to understand we are the policymakers and we have to make those difficult decisions. but i haven't received that answer even yesterday in the conference prime minister netanyahu held he gave conflicting messages on one hand, he wants to bring home the hostages on one hang is negotiating on the other end. he adds conditions that seems impossible to breach by the different mediators i'm not sure i'm so sorry about your brother-in-law still having to worry about how he is and all the other hostages there. >> thank you so much for coming on. i appreciate you. thank you. john a gunman kills four people on a subway while they were sleeping. >> how police managed find the
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suspect, and new this morning, one man hospitalized after he gets infected with three different mosquito borne illnesses at the same time kamala harris, yellow trump, the debate. >> everyone's been waiting for follows. cnn for complete coverage and exclusive pre and post debate analysis, a cnn special event, the abc news presidential debate simulcast next tuesday at nine eastern on cnn n and streamaming on maxax', titime yes. >> t the time has come f for a fresh h approach t to dog foodo evevery day. >> l lord, dog p people clarare dedeciding itsts time to quit t kibblele andnd feed theieir dod fresh foodod from the fafarmersg made by ththat. and delilivered right t to your dodoor? precise portion n for your d dog's s ne it''s an idedea whose time has come you find them in cities, towns, and suburbs all across
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paying. >> what israel called rocket money ryanan and mikahah are t g on to hotels. . >> what t if i took k on one ofe hotels andnd y you did thehe ot two teams, we are going to fig brian, 100 days and the best don't tell when 100 day hotel challenge specials series continues tonight at 8:00 on hgtv right? >> new this morning, police in forest park, illinois say a suspect is in custody after four people who appear to be sleeping were shot and killed on a chicago transit train seen in the florida miracle is in chicago with the very latest ronickher, what are you learning this morning? >> janja, such a horrific attack this train was in motion when those victims were shot, they were all passengers who police say were sleeping on that train and when the suspect came in and started shooting over two train cars, three
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victims were shot and killed in one train car, one victim in another. absolutely horrific early morning attack on labor day. here's what police had to say this obviously is shocking. >> you know, it is uncommon to have a mass shooting like this, especially this close to home that we're actually actively investing in. on, you know, on a holiday so, you know, for people to feel unsafe it's justified now, in terms of a motive, police are not clear yet they have not revealed that, but they say the suspect is in custody. >> they were able to find this individual thanks to surveillance video, they tracked him et off of that train and hop onto another line where he was later apprehended in a different jurisdiction by chicago police. they believed that this was a random attack, but an isolated incident. now, we don't know much about the suspect yet because he hasn't officially been charged yet. they have 48 hours. police have 48 hours since the time of his arrest to make those charges.
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once they're filed, we'll know more about his name, who he is, where he's from, and what charges he faces. and then and then he will eventually will see his first court appearance back to you, john all right. >> veronica miracle in chicago. veronica, keep us posted as new information comes in so a shocking double murder confession after a former mayor shot to death in 10-year-old boy says he did it we have new details on this and the philadelphia eagles are trying to clear things up after posters started popping up at bus stops around the city, falsely claiming the team had endorsed kamala harris harris for president, what's happening i'm longer up here. that will tell somehow we're ghost house aren't real goal will people believe that kind of crowd beetlejuice, joke, ever pay that may need just happen
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include e iran discocomfort, blururred vision, , and unusuau taste e sensatation. don''t tou cocontainer titipped your r eye any surfacace before u using saa removeve contact l lenses and d 15 minutes before we inserted dry eye over and over it's time for zygar a new and maybe strange twist on election misinformation. we're now seeing it bleeding into the sports world posters popping up at bus stops around philadelphia falsely claiming the philadelphia eagles had endorsed kamala harris for president when the team hadn't endorsed anyone, cnn's danny freeman is live in philadelphia, has got more on this. what are the eagles saying about this yeah. >> i mean, in short, the eagles are not happy kate, but in case you needed any reminder that philadelphia is going to be the center of the political universe in the next two months this is your latest and first example perhaps of this wilde season. so i'll get to what's on top of this bus stop in a second. but underneath you see this, the poster we've been talking about, it's kamala harris wearing a eagles helmet. you have the eagles logo right here. and importantly, down
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here, it said the official candidate of the philadelphia eagles. now the philadelphia eagles got on top of this pretty quickly yesterday. in the wake of these coming up, tweeting out that we're aware counterfeit political ads are being circulated and are working with their advertising partner to have them removed. then last night, some philadelphia citizen came up and posted that tweet all over this particular bus stop in university city just to make sure people knew that this was not an official endorsement. so that's basically what has happened from the eagles perspective while we don't know exactly who put up the original poster, we were able to get a statement from the company that is in charge of managing these ads. it's called intersection media. they said, quote, we note that the eagles and intersection had nothing to do with the creation or posting of this unauthorized copying an intersection staff will be removing the ads as soon as possible. now, kate, you mentioned in your intro, you could ask the question, why is this important? because this is a relatively small example here
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of misinformation when it comes to the election space, there were maybe about half a half dozen bus stops that had this particular signage. but again, it's just to emphasize that this is the sort of stuff that we may see as we go forward in this final sprint towards november and take a listen to what some philadelphia voters had to say when these posters came up somebody can't use their logo in a way that the eagles organization themselves might now want their logo used. it's also coded in people's brains. this picture of kamala harris with the eagles so again, this is not the largest example of voter misinformation out there, but again, it's something that we might see as we move forward towards the election. >> and i should note, i reached out to the harris campaign for comment. they have not gotten back to me just yet on this but they said go eagles, it's good
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to see you of course, john ever was just lucky. >> there were no four-letter we're a her words, if the eagles are involved at all right. it was all relatively clean, which is unusual, that like i was like, this could have been a lot different all right. >> it is the first day of the post-labor day campaign sprint 63 days to go until the election. one week until the big debate between vice president harris and former president trump. cnn senior political commentator david axelrod is with us now. david, you've seen a few post-labor day sprint and there's an article in the washington post. you're actually quoted in it, which suggests that the trump campaign sees a need to go even harder against vice president harris now, perhaps because some of the attacks they haven't, they've used so far, haven't been working and there's a blind quote in this article, it says quote, if you think this race is going to be decided by likeability, you're making a grave error because neither one of them is going to be liked aend of this race. what do you think of
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that? do you think they have to try to muddy it even more i think if you live in one of the six battleground states, you should hide your children from the television set for the next we've so i think it's going to be a very tough race and yes, i think that it is very clear that people have formed an opinion of donald trump and if this race is decided on popularity, he will lose that race. >> so their mission is to try and tear kamala harris down. she's relatively new two people, john, the fact is vice presidents are known, but they're not knowing. she's done a very good job in the first phase of filling in information about herself and she's made up a lot of ground. but this is a neck and neck race. trump doesn't, have the option of selling a new trump. he doesn't seem interested in selling a new trump. in fact, one of the problems that campaign has is that he is the old trump and he can't stay on
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a message so his preferred avenue is to rip down the opponent. that's what he does with great zeal hill and joy. and i expect that you're going to see that from now until the finish your friend and partner, all partner david plus rfk told politico on this subject, he said, of course, people get motivated about voting against somebody. >> but when there as motivated or more motivated about voting full somebody there's magic there. the idea that maybe vice president harris, whom he's working for now is animating the base there. how much faith if you were running this campaign, would you put in that hope? >> we'll look david and i are veterans of the obama campaigns and the obama campaign of 2008. we've seen this dynamic. i do think that's part of what's seized. this race in the five weeks since the vice president got into the race, i think
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people were so despondent now the choice they had and then here comes this fresh new choice who has made a very good impression. and there is the sense of possibility that maybe we don't have to vote. are fierce, but our hopes and that can have a lot of power i agree with david on that, especially juxtaposed with the kind of grinding negative nature of the trump campaign. and particularly trump. i mean the relentless grinding about how bad the country is and how awful everything is and so on weighs on people and she she has presented a counterpoint point to that a different vantage point about yes, we have problems but we have so much going for us. i think there is a constituency for that. the question john, is, this is a very close race and there's a relative handful of people who are going to decide this. what motivates them? and
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i think that's going to determine the outcome of this race. >> hey, david, who is the incumbent, do you think in this race because when you talk about donald trump in his tendency to look toward the past and talk about himself so much. he does play into this role of vice president harris may be trying to paint him as more of the incumbent. clearly the trump campaign doesn't want any he, that yeah, i think this has been the dynamic from the moment she emerged as a candidate, john, she is the turned the page candidate in this race, at least that's the way it's been. >> so far and trump, as you point out, his played into that, there is a weariness with trump and trumpism and frankly a desire to turn the page on this whole era and she has offered herself as the as the way to do that, as the vehicle to do that. i think that's been a powerful driver behind her surge that has put her in the race yeah. i think that, you
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know, trump was changed in a race against biden suddenly trump is not changed. and when people start chanting, we're not going back, they're talking about trump so this is a problem for them and they've tried to link her to biden. i think that was a reasonable strategy to try and make her a stand-in for biden but she has she has established her own identity in this race and that's a problem for the trump campaign. >> yeah watch this space we'll be watching the debate to see who emerges as more of the incumbent in those two hours. david axelrod, great to see you. thanks so much sara alright. thank you most quito borne illnesses from west nile virus to triple e and dengue fever have communities pretty worried two people are confirmed dead in wisconsin for mosquito borne, ellis is the former head of the national institute of allergy and infectious diseases. >> anthony fallacy was also hospitalized from west nile virus and a dad of four from new hampshire recently ended up
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in the hospital after a mosquito bite him he tested positive for three viruses spread by mosquitoes including triple e she was positive for tripoli, for west nile, and st. >> louis encephalitis. >> but the cdc and the infectious disease doctors, they don't know which one is making him this thick. joe is going to have to go to a long care long-term care and patient rehabilitation. that's going to be you know, 24 hour care of that from mosquito bite, cnn chief medical correspondent, dr. sanjay gupta is on call to help us break down exactly how concerned we should all be good morning to you. >> i hate mosquitoes. i'm just going to tell you that right now. how widespread though are these diseases? because we're hearing now a lot of different people getting getting hit with whether it's west nile or tripoli or dengue yeah yeah. i
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feel bad for that gentleman that we just heard heard from his sister-in-law. that is a rare situation. thankfully, though i'm going to show you these maps here to give you an idea of just how widespread this is. but as you look at this, keep in mind that most people are not going to develop symptoms these are cases that are actually being reported. so many of the cases are not being reported because people aren't developing significant symptoms, but you can see the darker the color, the more west nile around the country. texas, the northeast. that's where you're seeing a lot of these cases primarily when it comes to triple e. the other one that you mentioned you got six cases in five states right now. so that is much more rare. again, keeping in mind what i said, whenever you look at these maps that you have to take into account that there may be many people who don't develop symptoms. they never report it. so we don't always have clear tracking i will say when it comes to things like dengue, we are seeing a lot more dengue overall in the america's overall on this continent one thing in puerto rico, they
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declared a state of emergency because they had so many cases as well. so you are seeing more mosquitoes august and september, or peak mosquito season, and you're seeing more people getting bitten as a result. and more of these diseases. >> what is the risk of transmission of these diseases when being bitten by a mosquito you know it's interesting because again, i want to emphasize that is still rare. >> what we're talking about here. >> but at the same time, one mosquito, this question comes up all the time. >> but one mosquito that's infected can actually transmit the virus so it's not a question like i got a lot of mosquito bites, therefore, i'm more at risk. one mosquito can do it, but i wanted to pull this top number that you see on the screen there roughly, if you look in states where you're seeing a lot of spread of these viruses about one in 500 mosquitoes are actually infected so one mosquito can transmit the infection, but most mosquitos don't actually carry the virus and again, most
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of the people who get infected are not actually going to have symptoms. so keep those things in mind. there are some 200 different types of mosquitoes out there. there are three main ones that are spreading these types of diseases. it's just a female mosquitoes that really for the ones that bite and transmit the disease. so when you take that all into account, it's rare, but august, september the biggest seasons for this and there are certain parts of the country that are going to be worse than others sanjay gupta, it's always so good to talk to you i hate mosquitoes, but i love you. and so that's what we're going to leave it this morning. appreciate you coming on early for us you know, my tossing. >> i'm tossing to my friend dr. sanjay gupta again, don't forget to scan the qr code on your screen and head to cnn.com and submit your questions about the risk of mosquito borne diseases. dr. gupta will be back later this week to answer your questions, kate so more than 30 million people are facing extreme heat today where focus forecasters are now most concerned and what cities could be hitting record high coming
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up and then there's beetlejuice about to read back again and cnn sits down with some of the stars the tv moments that took culture over the edgege, people w who are watching and then our world change. . >> he hahad an explosion most every buba ration tv on the edge from airs s sunday, september r 22, did ninine on c it appeaears that despite e my sinisterer efforts, , employeeee still l managing t their own hrd payroll. >> why w would you t think mere humans d deserve to o do their payroll?l? because their livelihohoods dedepend on itit, because ththey have bibills to here mayay now retururn the wor of hr r and payrololl to its rirightful plalace of chaos oroe a tsunami ofof u unnecessaryry of w which you h have never see introducucing new advil l targe rerelief. the e only topopical
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the limitsts of what i is capab i'm reready to shohow the worlr how gogood i am. >> i t train all o over the glo and thatat's whwhat you're goin to see an n awol w whole diffef beast at we wednesday night, dynamite at 8:00 on tbs i'm natasha bertrand at the pentagon. and this is cnn a chilling tragedy out of louisiana where police say a ten-year-old boy confessed to killing the 82-year-old for marriage for the small town. >> and his adult daughter. the two were found dead inside a home sunday and mindon, which is east of shreveport, it's not clear how the boy is connected did at all to the victims and police say they're still trying to figure out why he shot them and urgent search
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is happening in connecticut right now for three missing in voters, their boat with nine people on board was going at a high rate of speed when it hit a break wall, it ripped apart and everyone aboard fell into the water sixth people have been rescued, but the three men are reportedly missing. and we're not wearing life jackets so over 30 million people are facing heat alerts right now across the southwest and along the west coast, los angeles could see triple digit temperatures by friday, cnn's derek van dam tracking this one for for us derek, what is happening yeah. kate, this is the first time that l.a. has reached 100 degrees or will reach since 2022, september of that month. so the city is opening cooling centers this week, you want to try to avoid some of those power outages. so reducing your electricity consumption, that's some of the advice that authorities are giving out. all in all, about 30 million americans under some sort of heat alert and this is actually an excessive heat warning for los angeles, las
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vegas, as well as phoenix. so that's why the population numbers are so high. look at these reds on the mat behind me. i mean, just incredible to see this and not only as the coloring interesting to see, but also the departure from normal, it should be about 77 in los angeles. so when you're talking temperatures nearing 100 degrees were talking over 20 above average for this time of year. so national weather service classifies this as extreme heat anywhere you see that shading of purple vulnerable populations we'll be impacted most significantly from this excessive heat, phoenix, look at this well above average, hundred and 14, you have had an unprecedented summer hottest summer on record. in fact 54 days. kate, of temperatures above 110 degrees no, thank you. >> thank you. and more and more examples of just what the climate crisis, how it setting in and the impacts were seeing from coast to coast, north to south. everything in between, it's good to see you, derek. thank you. john. >> all right. this week, the highly anticipated sequel to
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beetlejuice will be in the theaters 36 years after the original cnn's elizabeth wagmeister sat down with three of the stars when odor writer catherine o'hara and jenna ortega fatal fetal just three iconic words. >> nobody can say it three times rant about seeing it twice, three iconic women returning to that ghostly comedy the truce is loose, 36 years after the original catherine o'hara. >> i'm trying to capture the perfect primal scream. >> and was known or ryder i can't believe i'm reprising their roles in the long-awaited sequel to beetlejuice. >> it took a long time, but why is now the right time? for june had to be born? >> yeah. become an actress. i think i'm going to love it here fresh off netflix is monster hit wednesday. >> jenna ortega, please. riders daughter and o'hara's granddaughter, your mom, lydia deep unfortunately sure. >> legend all three women sat
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down with cnn ahead of the film's release, i love sitting with the three of you because it's the three generations of women of this film. >> jenna, what did you learn from working with one and katherine, first of all comedy legend. everything that you guys call myself absolutely perfect 50, like when oana has this quality to her that that's why you're the perfect lydia, because you feel like you know where you feel like you relate to it, but there's still something there that's unattainable and it belongs to just, you the sequel finds the deep family back home were beetlejuice first haunted them when ortega's astrid accidentally opened the portal to the afterlife michael keaton's beetlejuice is unleashed all over again i honestly did not know that this movie was so loved derek, the right age, i guess. >> yeah, the nostalgic sort of value of it really means something to them. >> there's just nothing like it. its, in its own genre that is so i a testament to tim timber and returns to direct the sequel to the 1988 classic.
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>> is that a movie that could have been made and like 1989, it did. it really was the anchor to this s3 generations the deeds, sorry, and also made wednesday with ortega a natural choice for beetlejuice. even though she wasn't born when the original came out, she sought decades later at age nine. >> and what do you remember about walking? >> i remember sweating a lot because i saw drunk beetlejuice costume when i was 6-years-old at all costume party and truth hair vied me as for a third movie, likely titled with those three curse words, you don't use beetlejuice. >> beetlejuice. >> he's generational stars say they could be back for more for like to be alive yes, 30 years elizabeth wagmeister, cnn, los angeles all right breaking news this morning, at least 41 people have been killed, hundreds wounded after a

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