tv Erin Burnett Out Front CNN September 11, 2024 11:00pm-12:00am PDT
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major swing state. she's going to arizona. she's been to michigan. she's been to pennsylvania. she's been to these major states where obviously are going to potentially decide this election. >> well absolutely. if you think about it, encouraging people to vote and you might be in these major states that shouldn't be a partisan thing. that should just be an american thing to civic duty to go out and vote happens to overlap with some important states, but that shouldn't be seen as a partisan thing. actually. >> yeah so are there any drawbacks too a celebrity endorsement ever? >> well, obviously sometimes for the celebrity there can be, there can be people might say, well, i'm not going want to follow you because i don't agree with you on that policy issue, but generally was so much of how when we are fans of people, it part of it is their values, right? so it's not surprising that she would be supporting kamala harris if you've been following her and you know, the issue should cares about yeah. >> she's also very outspoken and connect with her fans exactly. >> karen finney, great to have
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you. thank you so much. thank you so much for joining us. the news continues right here on cnn watching us here in the united states, canada, and around the world. i'm kim brunhuber. this is cnn newsroom team trump does damage control after a disappointing debate night while vice president kamala harris is riding a fresh wave of momentum as she gets back on the campaign trail delayed, but undaunted, the crew of the space x polaris dawn mission prepares for historic spacewalk. the first bite entirely civilian astronaut not crew. and the high-stakes election less than two months away, america's top diplomat reassures ukraine that it will have the united states support no matter who wins the white house this november atlanta. this is cnn newsroom with kim brunhuber
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days away from election day here in the u.s. but the first absentee ballots are already in the mail in the state of alabama. know it comes after the first and possibly only debate between kamala harris and donald trump the harris campaign was so pleased with her performance. it's asking for a second debate in october. trump says he's still deciding allies of the former president or expressing concern mostly in private about his debate performance. some tells cnn it was a wash at best a loss at worst vice president harris clearly won the debate in terms of her delivery her polish, her oregon is organization, and her preparation. i know the president listed several people that he had fired during his administration. he may want to add to that the people that prepped him hello, debate last night he it was the land of missed opportunities. >> i don't think he should say stuff that may be may make it harder for people to vote for you the been occasions now both
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candidates are focusing heavily this week on battleground states. >> harris will campaign in north carolina in the day ahead, trump will visit arizona and nevada more now from cnn's kristen holmes kamala harris, former president donald trump, playing defense, trying to insist he won the debate when you don't win, it's like a fighter when a fighter has a bad fight gets knocked doubt or loses the fight. >> the first thing he says is we want a rematch. i would do nbc, i do fox too i do fox too. but right now, we have to determine whether now we want to do earlier a moment of civility among the rivals, trump and vice president kamala harris shaking hands as they commemorated the september 11 terror attacks at ground zero in new york, it came less than 12 hours after the handshake harrison is she needed ahead of a fiery, intense debate in philadelphia kamala harris is up good debate. that is why so many military leaders who you
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have worked with have told me you are a disgrace. >> she goes down as the worst vice president in the history of our country, paris, successfully goading her republican rival a range of issues. >> the values i bring to the importance of homeownership knowing not everybody got handed $400 million on a silver platter and then filed bankruptcy six times first of all, i wasn't given $400 million. >> i wish i was, but i was given a fraction of that, a tiny fraction and built it into many, many billions of dollars many, many billions from his legal woes. >> well, i think this is so rich coming from someone who has been prosecuted for national security crimes, economic crimes, election interference has been found liable for sexual assault, excuse me every one of those cases were started by them against their political opponent. >> and i'm winning most of them. and i will win the restaurant appeal to the size of his campaign rallies.
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>> and what you will also notice is that people start leaving his rallies early out of exhaustion boredom, people don't go to her rallies. >> there's no reason to go. people don't leave my rallies. we have the biggest rallies, the most incredible rallies in the history of politics in that same breath, trump also promoting false claims that immigrants in ohio were stealing hundred eating pets in springfield they're eating the dogs, the people that came in, they're eating the cats. they're eating they're eating the pets of the people that live there. >> it's not about extreme trump, taking aim at harris's record as vice president. >> so he just started by saying she's going to do this. he's going to do that. she's going to do all these wonderful thanks. why hasn't she done it? she's been there for three-and-a-half years on policy. >> the two candidates clashing over their stances on abortion rights the government and donald trump certainly should not be telling a woman what to do with her body. >> they have abortion in the ninth month.
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>> that is not happening. it's insulting to the women of america afterward, was both campaigns claiming victory, would you, the best debate i've never personally but harris emphasized sizing. >> there's still work to be done today, was a good day. >> we got to work tomorrow we got 56 days to go. we got a lot of work to do now, donald trump's advisers are essentially saying the same thing you just heard there from vice president kamala harris, that there is still a lot of work to be done and those republicans, i spoke to who were disappointed didn't donald trump's debate demeanor on tuesday night say they don't actually think is going to hurt him in the long run, but they do note that this is going to be an incredibly tight race with razor-thin margin that there is a lot of work to be done. donald trump himself, he'll be on the campaign trail really non-stop for at least the next week, he's going on the west coast or kamala harris also hitting the ground running there are just over 50 days left to go both sides realize how serious and how critical
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this time is. kristen holmes, cnn, new york no, i want to bring in natasha lindstaedt, who's a professor of government at the university of essex, and she joins me now from colchester, england. >> good to see you again. thanks so much for being here so listen too early to know definitively if the dynamics of the race has shifted. but what's your impression based on sort of the polls from what we've seen about people thinking who they thought won, what effect might that have on the campaign going forward? >> the harris campaign has to be elated with her debate performance because trump just got himself into a mess of lies and he seemed incoherent and harris really cornered him. she aided him force. he took the bait. she dictated she was in control. >> she came across as very president central and the snap poll done by cnn showed that 63% of those debate watchers
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felt that she did win the debate. >> now, i would expect that she's going to get a little bit of a bump from this, but it's still early on as report already mentioned, there's still plenty of time for things to change and actually the polls are still incredibly close. and one of the the worry things as those that were watching the debate are still a 20 point lead for trump in terms of the way they feel he can handle the economy versus harris she definitely has a lot of work to do in terms of winning over those last 5% of voters who i would imagine our republic looking leaning but don't like trump. >> and think that they were better off when he was in charge in addition to doing that, she's going to have to mobilize her base of supporters to actually vote on election day, getting them out with early voting, particularly in the state of pennsylvania where there's early voting. and then also trying to target these unlikely voters that would lean towards voting for her, getting them to the polls is something
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that democrats have really struggled with year-on-year on out getting people to vote that would normally maybe their views might be aligned with them, but they don't bother to vote on election day. >> so she definitely has a lot to do. i'm sure her campaign is incredibly happy with her debate performance yeah, given that one could make a case, i guess, for both candidates about why they might not want a second debate. >> donald trump might be afraid of a repeat of the last one, and harris might have less incentive to do it again, given how well the first one went. so what do you think will there be around two i think there might be around to but i don't thin don't think he should debate again because it doesn't really matter that much for his supporters, how he does in debates. >> they don't seem to really care and he doesn't have the discipline to do what he would need to do, which would be to focus on immigration and any
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economy he didn't really ask that question of, why haven't you done all these things you said you're going to do until the 100th minute. >> he doesn't perform well in debates in spite of the fact that i think he he thinks he does. >> so i don't think he should debate again, if i were harris because she just had an amazing debate, almost master class and how to debate trump. what does she have to gain by debating again, could she sell her message articulate her policy message in other forums, if we look at what happened in the 2016 election, trump versus clinton only 24% felt according to cnn poll, felt that trump had won the debate. that first debate. and clinton still loss so here's might be better off. just going on the campaign trail and trying to get through to people what her policies are, because that was one of the criticisms, at least have some of the decided voters speaking of undecided voters maybe this will help kamala
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harris a lot has been made of taylor swift's endorsement of her. now that the data is kind of mixed about the effect of celebrities making political endorsements in general, they don't actually convince anyone to change their vote, but it might encourage people to actually get out and vote. i mean, you talked about sort of the turnout and unlikely voters. so what effect do you think the endorsement will have that is really hard to saying looking, i've looked at the impact of celebrity endorsements and whether it matters, whether it backfires and we do know when taylor swift posted on instagram several years back she's able to get 35,000 people to register to vote so she may impact getting people to vote mean, she did say in her proposed she was trying to encourage people to make up their minds and make their own decisions. >> but she was clearly endorsing harris. she has over 250 million followers on instagram. we don't know how many of those are eligible voters in the u.s. so it's very difficult to tell, but that was
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something that trump's campaign with actually fearing. we know he was fearing this because he tried to insinuate that harris that taylor swift actually was endorsing him erroneously. so it's this x factor that's hard to tell but in a race that is so incredibly close, these types of things could matter absolutely will have to see what difference it makes intentional and said, thank you so much for being here with us. >> really appreciate it. >> thanks for having >> we're following developments along the u.s. gulf coast where power outages are growing in louisiana hours after francine made landfall as a category two hurricane it's not weakened to a tropical storm as it pushes further inland across louisiana into mississippi, but it's sobering with it. heavy rain and wind that's now spreading into parts of the florida panhandle and alabama. the storm roared ashore wednesday afternoon in terrebonne parish in southern louisiana, dangerous wind and heavy rain pounded the area even to flooding down trees and
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power outages. so right now, more than 380,000 homes and businesses across the state are without power and have a look, images and images and video taken from one marina in louisiana show exactly francine's fury these are shots taken before the storm made landfall the owners of cocoa marinas say it took just a few hours for floodwaters to move in a picnic table said to be at least three feet tall, was almost completely submerged now in new orleans, flash flood warning is still in effect. the national weather service says between six to eight inches of rain have fallen in the area. and that's more than a month's worth of rain over the past several hours alone three wildfires in southern california have burned dozens of homes and towns and cities east of los angeles. relatives of a family of seven say they're devastated after the home they lived in for more than 30 years was burned to the ground in the airport fire in orange county. the family had less than ten minutes to grab
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their backpacks, laptops, and pets before the fire in golf house, the bridge fire in san bernardino county is now the largest in the state scorching about 48,000 acres or 19,000 hectares in two days. thousands have been forced to evacuate as the flames tore through the area. and the lifts at a nearby ski resort, have also been damaged by the fire now one resident whose house was spirit says he was stunned by how fast the fire raced through the community wilson is looking outside, looking in it was pretty scary. a lot of a lot more civility. you can realize when you're outside looking at the flames, you don't realize how scary and now chaotic it is all as it was like a movie yesterday, every burning out, go into the gas and gas in their car is up trying to get out of here before they got burned to was it was scary a lot more, lot more real. than you realize all right. >> still to come spacex astronauts are getting ready to attempt the first commercial spacewalk in the coming hours. while details about this historic moment when we come back, stay with us
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day. >> oh, wedding day? >> this is cnn the world's news network closed captioning. he's brought to you by skechers hands-free slip in this tiny home trend now, this is more like it. the same goes for my footwear. do i want hands-free with wide fits? get your slippers? dry wipe fits, sketcher, slipped civilian spacex crew will attempt to historic but risky spacewalk just hours from now. billionaire jared isaac, men and spacex engineers sarah gillis are expected to take their first steps outside the crew dragon capsule in their new extra vehicular activity spacesuits. the capsule doesn't have an airlock, so the entire interior will be exposed to the vacuum of space during the spacewalk we go live now to washington and cnn's space and defense correspondent, kristin fisher. so kristen, it was supposed to be actually happening right now
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at this hour. so why the delay? >> we don't know kim, but this is a very risky sort of never been done before thing for spacex and for these astronauts on board. and so we just don't know what the exact reason is yet. it could be a variety of things i don't have confirmation that it's any one of these, but just to give you a range of the reasons for the delay, it could be anything from, the astronauts getting sick after getting space adaptation syndrome. it's a nasty little thing that many astronauts get, especially when you fly to space for the first time and a lot of astronauts throw up and you can't throw up when you're about to put but on an enclosed space suit and go out into the vacuum of space. so could be something like that, could be something like this spacecraft has to depressurize, it has to do what's conducted, what's called a pre-breathe and it's something that the spacecraft has been doing for about two
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days now. so it could be something did you do with the interior pressure inside the spacecraft or it could be something else entirely. but whatever the case is what's going to happen now is this spacecraft spacewalk is now expected to start more than three hours after when it was initially supposed to start. so we're now looking at a start time around 6:00 a.m. eastern time. and just to put in perspective how big of a deal this is. this is the first time that any non-government, nonprofessional astronauts have ever ventured out into the vacuum of space. it's the first time that spacex has ever used this type of space suit, brand new designed in under two-and-a-half years just for this mission. so that's no. and then it's also the first time that the dragon spacecraft that they're in is going to be opened up an exposed to the vacuum of space and spacecraft's need to be
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hardened all the interior electronics and components and avionics they need to be hardened to make sure that they can withstand the vacuum of space. so all sorts of things that could go wrong here, which is probably why spacex being extra cautious, right now. and delaying this spacewalk a few hours, but hopefully it'll still happen today. if not, there is a backup opportunity tomorrow and we can all wake up early or not. if you're overseas and do this all over again all right, we will see a couple of hours from now, whether they actually go through it. >> kristin fisher in washington thank you so much. appreciate that thank all right. for more on this. i want to bring in cnn aerospace analyst miles o'brien and also lending his expertise as former nasa astronaut garrett reisman. thank you so much for being here both of you i want to start with you. i mean, you've been on a couple of spacewalks before, so many
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unknowns and these further delays now, so take me through the mindset of the astronauts as they wait. i mean, how nervous would they be? do you think? >> i don't know if i'd use the word nervous, but they're excited. they're soopers. i remember before my first spacewalk my heart was racing and i was just super hyper aware and focused it's, you know, you are about to do something that's one of the most incredible life experiences. and the anticipation he can really get here? just waiting for that hashed open felt like it took an eternity even though it it's just a matter of minutes. so it's a super exciting thing that we're about to do. yeah i mean, what is that moment like when you when you pull yourself clear of the vehicle and into space when you first got there, it's surreal combination of the familiar and the outlandish and what i mean by that is that the suit fits exactly like the one that in training that your tools are exactly the same as the ones you've been working
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with on the ground. the bolts are right where they said there would be everything. when you go outside it's exactly how you expect it because they're training is so good. but then you look over your shoulder and you see the entire east coast of the united states go flying by his 17,500 miles an hour. and that you didn't see in training and and nothing can really prepare you for that now, unbelievable. listen, i want to go to you. now, miles or so. so our reporter, kristen there talk to us about some of the differences that we've seen with other missions. this one they're plugged in as well via the umbilical cord essentially surely a life-giving a mechanism there. so take us through some of the differences about this spacewalk from, what we've seen before yeah, kim just listening to garrett. >> i don't understand how anybody gets any work done on a spacewalk with that view, but that's put that aside for a moment. this actually hearkens back to the first spacewalks in
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the 1960s, the first u.s astronaut to do it at white alexey leonov of the soviet union in that same time frame they in both cases they had to evacuate all the air from the spacecraft and we're attached to the life support systems on the spacecraft with umbilicals, which is what is going to happen in this case. so it's a it's a stepwise kind of thing the space suit that garrett war, the emu, extra vehicular mobility unit, has a backpack on it, which allows their spacewalk her to be untethered. although they hang on pretty tied to the space station, of course and in other ways are attached, but it has its own complete life-support system. it's of many space craft and what elon musk and spacex are attempting to do here is make these suits a little more less expensive. it's about a $50
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million suit on the nasa side and if elon musk and spacex are two achieve their goals of sending our mottos of spacecraft and people to a place like mars. they're going to have to drive down the cost. so party this is this first step of understanding what these suits are like. and so for the first one it's a good idea to stay attached and staying on that space suit. i mean, they have said that obviously, things will be improved and so on and so forth. but this could be basically an iteration of what we might see humans actually wearing on mars yeah it's, it's not an easy engineering problem when you think about it, i garrett can attest to this and when when the suit is pressurized it blows up like a balloon and the mere act of closing your glove can act proceed it because all kinds of problems and blisters and so forth. >> so you have to find the sweet spot between pliability
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flexibility, having joined set operate in a way that you could do some work and still protecting the human being from the void. we're talking about huge temperature swings, many hundreds this is a degrees plus and minus what were the euro in the sunshine are on the dark side of lower-earth orbit. and you have to prepare for that, and you have to make sure that they asteron is is protected in every way so this process of learning how to build with that kind of, you know, sort of rigidity and yet pliability if that makes any sense at all, is what thereafter staying with you. >> i mean, this success by spacex's is in contrast with what we've seen from the boeing starliner. we saw the price problems with its thrusters meant it's returned was delayed for three months and just came back now without the astronauts that it was meant to carry a real contrast in perception here, if this is
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successful yeah. >> i mean, spacex continues to overachieve. if you asked me ten years ago, kim which of the two contractors selected to fly spacecraft to the international space station, which are the two would succeed soonest i'd probably would have bet on boeing, which has historically been involved in based missions with nasa since the beginning but that obviously is not what has happened. this is i think the 14th crewed mission of a dragon capsule 14 and starliner, as you know, ended kind of ignominiously without anybody inside in new mexico just last week so it's space is hard and nasa is dealing with all kinds of issues of funding, brain drain, recent report just came out somewhat scathing as to whether the agency, just has way too much on its plate relative to the
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budget it has said so there's a lot of issues that are dragging down nasa and meanwhile, spacex seems to be flying high here. >> i want to ask you about this. i mean, there are so many things to be looking for as we watch this take place including how the vehicle itself will a deal with deep pressurization and being exposed to the vacuum of space. take me through what you will be studying as we watch this coming up. couple of hours well, it should take about two hours total from depressing the cabin to repressing it back up again so it can be fairly quick compared to the spacewalks that i did and we do on the space station, which typically lasts over seven hours in fact, that we have about nine hours worth of consumables in that suit, as miles pointed out and it is quite different. >> it because it recycles the air, which is why we have so much more time. these suits
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that they're using are open-loop suits. your cafta constantly feed them with fresh oxygen the moment you start doing that. you're on the clock and so it is a bit of a nail-biter and i would say that actually the risks involved in this spacewalk is higher than the risk i faced on my three spacewalks so i'll be watching them there. they're not going to do anything terribly difficult from a task perspective. but it has to go right and there's not a whole lot of room for error because of this issue with the suits, because the difference there that's what i'll be watching them. i'll be i'll be i look, sara and anna are good friends of mine. in fact, i hired both of them at spacex to work there and until they get back inside and repress the capsule and have that hatch closed. i'm going to be a little nervous to be honest with you. >> yeah. i imagine so. you and the families and everybody else who will be watching hesitate to ask you this since you are
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friends with them, but you talked about the risk being higher now, i mean, what would your biggest worry be? >> well, i think this suits will do just fine. they've been very well-tested in vacuum chambers on the ground with people inside. in fact, what these crew members inside of them, they're training is excellent. i think they're very the crews are very well prepared. and what they're attempting to do is not physically terribly difficult necessarily. so i'm, feeling okay about all that. it's just that things during spacewalks often don't go exactly as you plan. things happen. you know, it's difficult to work in suits like that and just opening and closing hatches can be difficult. and when we have problems than you have nine hours to deal with them, that's one thing we have a problem here, and you only have minutes to deal with it. that's a bit more of a high wire act miles will end with you assuming this goes to plan,
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everything works. >> what happens next? take us through the trajectory well, the mission is a five-day mission and as we said, there is another opportunity for a spacewalk if they can't get this all to work and feel comfortable about going outside. >> so there may be another chance at that. they'll continue series of experiments. they flew to a very high altitude the 2d surpassing an altitude record, record set by gemini 11 back almost 60 years ago. and that gave them a dose of radiation. they're trying to understand the radiation environment for any crew that heads out to mars. it's an important issue that needs to be addressed to protect hector crew from the radiation which exists in space, then subsequent to the spacewalk, they're going to test out a communications system that hasn't been tried in space before starlink, also an elon musk company there are actually
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above the satellites which make that satellite enabled communication system work. and they'll use a laser scheme to try to communicate with it. yet, yet another thing that's important if you're serious about colonizing the moon and mars is you want to have some good bandwidth as well. so they'll step through them those over the five-day mission and hopefully get this historic spacewalk done before too long. >> all right. we'll be watching. we're expecting it in about what, three-and-a-half hours from now, miles o'brien, garrett reisman. thank you so much both for being here with us. appreciate it my pleasure during the u.s. presidential debate on tuesday, donald trump pushed the false claim that haitian migrants in ohio how are eating dogs and cats and get reaction from people in the state that's coming up next, stay with us for you premiere saturday at nine on cnn
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thailand days some time very exciting you on sir, don't think the poll what did you do? >> saved her they're eating the dogs, the people that came in, they're eating the cats. they're eating, they're eating the pets of the people that live there haiti's government is condemning those false claims being pushed by donald trump during the u.s presidential debate about haitian immigrants in a social media post, they said, it's not the first time haitians are facing discriminatory remarks to serve political interests cnn's omar jimenez went to ohio to find out more about the allegations when you hear allegations of haitians eating dogs and cats and taking them off the street and stealing people's yards what is your reaction here that
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i think was a shocking to me, honestly because the first question i asked myself, where in the world of people waiting vila's dorsonville is the head of the haitian community help and support center in springfield, ohio. >> he came to the united sates about four years ago from haiti and he hasn't just question the nature of the recent rumors. he's questioned what they will do to his community. >> it's just like, as you know, from yeah, it's just like the gantry discrimination and racist and they do not normally take time to see the impact that can have on the mental health the immigrants fleeing the country from all kinds of chaos. >> to be clear, former president donald trump's claims are not supported by the evidence in a statement to cnn, a spokesperson for the city of springfield said there have been no credible reports or specific claims of pets being harmed, injured, or abused by individuals jools within the immigrant community. but all of
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this has also come as part of a very real surge in haitian population in springfield we have realistic in and saying 12 to 15,000 it says what we've, what have counted through the health department and other agencies, and they are here legally under the immigration parole program. >> once here, immigrants are then eligible to apply for temporary protected status haitian temporary protected status was recently extended and redesignated for haiti, mainly due to violent and arche in the country. but the total population of springfield is around 58,000. that's around 25%. haitian. and the growing pains in the community have not always been easy. state officials say it's stressing resources that obviously represents a massive increase you should upon percentage of the population in springfield it is it is unprecedented in such a short period of time, fell government simply has to be part of the solution they
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have to step up is their policies that have created these surgeries, the influx of haitians has also manifested itself in other ways, including a tragedy, specifically in 2023 when 11-year-old aid and clark was killed in a springfield bus crash, one that involved a haitian immigrant who at a driver's license that was not valid in ohio as reported by the new york times, a1's father declined to speak on camera, but as others have posted about the tragedy recently, he told cnn in a statement, we just want our family out of the news and for aid to not be mentioned in regards to politics putting aside any unverified theories about cats and dogs, they'll brynn dorsainville, also haitian, says he understands the criticisms about the strain on resources caused by the influx of immigrants i agree these people when but he also painted a harsh reality. >> if it was not for a matter of death or life in my country,
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it would be better to get back. >> omar jimenez, cnn, springfield, ohio ministration is reaffirming the united states commitment to supporting ukraine. now it comes as donald trump cast doubts on what he would do if he were elected president in november. now, just to remind you, here's what trump said during tuesday's presidential debate. areas do you want ukraine to win this war? i want the war to stop. i want to save lives that are being uselessly, people being killed by the millions. it's the millions, it's so much worse then the numbers that you're getting, what you're fake numbers. >> just to clarify in the question, do you believe it's in the u.s. best interests for ukraine to win this war, yes, i think it's a u.s best interest to get this war finished and just get it done u.s. secretary of state, anthony blinken met with the british foreign secretary and ukrainian leaders in kyiv tuesday, blinken told his ukrainian counterpart, the u.s. won't abandon them as
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they fight against russia and ukraine's new foreign minister is downplaying trump's comments. here is dark with sochi wooden ship would on the way, president, we will, without any doubt have a new president of the united states but we believe in steadfast support from the u.s. >> nation from the american nation strongly in bipartisan support. we clearly believe, and i convinced suainable peace in ukraine is also a strategic interest for the united states of america and that will be maintained because we are here to protect our joint values. common values of democracy and we believe that strategic democratic leadership of the u.s. >> is here to stay another major topic of discussion at the meeting in kyiv was about easing restrictions on using western supplied weapons so that ukraine can strike deeper into russia. >> cnn's fred pleitgen has more long distance weapons for ukraine in the use of those weapons certainly was topic number one as secretary state
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blinken visited kyiv together with his british counterpart for part in what can only be described as a diplomatic show of force and show of support for the ukrainians. >> of course, ukraine now also has a new foreign minister as well. however, as far as that topic of those long distance weapons is concerned, there really wasn't much in the way of substance. what are the things that the secretary state said is that he did have that discussion with ukraine's president volodymyr zelenskyy that he would take the points that were made in that discussion back to washington talk it over with president biden, that president biden would then debate all of this with his british counterpart when they meet later this week. however, the secretary of state did reiterate that the united states wants ukraine to win and is in it for the long haul we want ukraine to win and we're fully committed to keep marshaling the support that it needs for its brave defenders and citizens to do just that. our collective message to putin as clear our support will not wane our unity will not break
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both the secretary of state and his british counterpart announced substantial new aid packages for ukraine. the brits and trump terms of military support, the u.s. in terms of civilian support for ukraine, especially in terms of repairing damaged energy infrastructure, which of course going to be very important when the winter comes but one of the things that's also clear is that this visit comes as ukraine remains on the back foot, especially in the east of the country. and one of the things that ukrainian forces have been telling us on the ground is that right now they're not only outmanned by the russians, but they are also outgunned. one of the big problems that they have is russia's aerial campaign, not just against ukrainian cities, but of course, also against ukraine's frontline troops. that's why the ukrainian say it's absolutely important for them to be able to strike russia deep inside russian territory with those western weapons for pleitgen, cnn, kyiv we'll be right back things in changing in chinese and why i'm not changed sexual
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time and cy pods has been trusted with over 6 million moves. they don't wait, use promo code, big 25 to save visit hod hod.com today, tv on the edge premieres sunday, september 22, did nine on cnn well, donald trump isn't reacting well to pump star taylor swift's endorsement of kamala harris after today's debates, have a look i was not a taylor swift fan. >> it was just a question of time. she couldn't you couldn't possibly endorsed biden. you look at biden, you couldn't possibly endorse, but she's a very liberal person. she seems to always endorse a democrat close to 10 million instagram users have liked swift's post explaining her decision to back harris and running mate tim walz according to the general services administration, more than 33 330,000 people have been redirected from swift's post to the voter registration site, vote vote.gov, it's not clear how many of those people actual sleeve registered and the
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harris-walz camp? >> campaign is selling out of taylor swift tribute friendship bracelets after the singer's endorsement, a pack of two costs, 20 bucks more now from cnn's brian todd in warren washington. >> i ready for endorsements. so many had been anticipating, has landed pop superstar taylor swift has thrown her support behind vice president kamala harris on instagram, where she has over 280 million followers. swift writes of harris quote, she fights for the rights and causes i believe need a warrior to champion them. i think she is a steady-handed, gifted leader. xi also mentioned lgbtq plus rights, ivf, and a woman's right to her own body she signs the childless cat lady, a rebuttal to senator jd vance's criticism of democrats without children swift also slammed donald trump for re-posting these fake images, implying she and her fans support him. so what impact could swift's endorsement have
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on harris's campaign in a race where young voters and women voters are crucial many of taylor swift's fans are women, young women, and those are votes that she definitely needs and wants to yet. and so i think that it could potentially play into that gender gap. at dynamic that we're seeing in 2024, kamala harris is running mate tim walz, who was in the middle of an interview when he learned of the endorsement, immediately asked swift's fans to volunteer for the campaign. >> this would be the opportunity swifties. kamala harris.com get on over there give us i can get things going. >> a year ago when swift urged her fans on instagram to register to vote. registration saw a surge of over 35,000 in just one day, according to the group vote.org, maybe what the roadshow play is that helping with voter turnout? maybe not necessarily swaying people, but encouraging more people to come out to vote who might otherwise vote. >> for years. analysts say swift was reluctant to get into politics or dad was really scared for her to step into the
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political arena because we know that comes with a lot of backlash no matter which side you're on in 2018, swift finally jumped in endorsing to democratic congressional candidates in tennessee, where she owns property in a netflix documentary about her, swift is captured in an argument with her father about getting involved in politics she was critical of republican marsha blackburn, who ended up winning that senate race in tennessee. >> she votes against against fair pay for when he votes against the reauthorization of the violence against women act which is just basically protecting us for domestic abuse and stalking. >> stalking harris has gotten a bump of new energy among young people with a wave of online memes and jokes this summer. her campaign song is beyond says freedom also often played at harris is rallies, including the one after last night's debate
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donald trump responded to taylor swift's endorsement of kamala harris by saying he he was not a taylor swift fan and that she would probably pay a price for this in the marketplace. a trump campaign spokeswoman, sent cnn a statement saying, this is more evidence that the democrats have become the party of the wealthy elite. brian todd, cnn, washington finally, the sour rockstar jon bon jovi found himself in the right place at the right time to help save a life. >> now that place was a pedestrian bridge in nashville, tennessee where a woman was standing on the other side of the railing appearing ready to jump. bon jovi was filming a music video when he noticed a woman and went to speak with her, police, say he helped persuade her to come off the ledge. the singer in another unidentified person, helped lift the woman to safety and gave her a hug and police say the wound was taken can the hospital and the thank the singer for coming to her aid and call it the best. sorry,
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there's now we're going to a different store here more lights, light-hearted story we want to call it the best of biking and jet skiing. so what you're looking at here is a motorsport competition from georgia riding his bike on the water and kind of he used a modified motorbike equipped with small skis, but it only works if the rider maintains a high-speed and dodges any waves that can topple him the georgia and daredevil road, 20 miles or 33 kilometers between two coastal towns on the black sea and i'm kim brunhuber, i'll be back in just a moment with more cnn newsroom please do stay with us
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