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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  September 13, 2024 5:00am-6:00am PDT

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on that list amazon co founder jeff bezos, well ahead of facebook co-founder mark zuckerberg and of course, tesla is not must only asked that it is his biggest but he has this sprawling business empire, right? i mean he owned almost half of spacex. that's the private aerospace company that just yesterday made history with the first ever commercial spacewalk. >> he owns a big chunk of the boring company, neuralink x ai, the artificial intelligence startup, then also maybe his most controversial business x, that's the social media company formerly known as twitter. >> x has obviously come under fire over how it's moderated content it's also lost a lot of values since musk has taken over, but clearly it hasn't taken a big head out of musk fortune, just one other point here, john, just the fact that
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we're talking about potentially the first trillionaire does raise a lot of questions about how much power and frankly, how much wealth one person can accumulate. >> one person, like elon musk, especially matt egan. thank you so much a new brand new magical hour of cnn news central starts right now rolling out this morning from both presidential campaigns, which voters, kamala harris is targeting and why donald trump says he has done debating plus thousands of boeing employees are now on strike for the first time in 16 years. >> the deal rejected and why this strike could do he real the aerospace giants attempts that recovery and tank versus train train winds drivers in south carolina catch a wild collision on camera. got more on that. i'm kate bolduan with sara sidner and john berman. this is cnn new central
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right this morning, no debates. so now what what will the harris county campaign do in the final sprint now that donald trump says he will not debate again, we've got new reporting on how the harris team will respond and where she will look for votes. and breaking overnight brand new taylor swift themed ads in times square and las vegas digital. billboards funded by the dnc. and according to the hollywood reporter, approved by taylor swift, just a taste perhaps, how the harris campaign will use the big new endorsement from taylor swift cnn's kevin liptack here with the latest covering a lot of basis for us this morning, kevin, what do you have on this? >> yeah, that taylor swift endorsement. i think brett cheers to the kamala harris
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headquarters and you see them seizing on it almost immediately. they have those billboards in times square. and in las vegas saying that we're in our kamala era, they started selling the taylor swift friendship bracelets. they actually sold out of them, but probably more significantly for them, the link that taylor swift posted on her instagram to the website vote.gov, received an enormous amount of traffic, almost 406,000 visitors, which is an exponential increase from what it normally get. so they do see some of that playing out. but of course that is not the centerpiece of the harris strategy. the centerpiece is in the battleground states which is exactly where she'll be today. i think if you could call this phase of the campaign anything it's the grind it out phase for kamala harris certainly she is thrilled with her debate performance and her campaign has been thrilled with her debate performance. but now it's all about getting in front of voters and today she'll be in pennsylvania it's been interesting if you look at the last eight days, kamala harris has spent seven
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of them in pennsylvania, either all of the day are part of the day and it really gives you a sense of how critical that state is going to be in her strategy moving forward. now, today, she'll be in two counties that donald trump actually won in 2020 and her camp payne says that's an indication that she's willing to look for votes pretty much anywhere in the keystone state shall be first and western pennsylvania. she'll be visiting a small local business with the senator john fetterman and then it's onto a big campaign rally in wilkes-barre. of course, the harris campaign had hoped that this next phase phase of the, of the election cycle would include a second debate. donald trump seems to have ruled that out. although when you talk to harris advisers, they're not necessarily taking that at face value. and of course it has been true that down trump in the past has found a way to get to yes. after ruling something out. so i don't think they think that this will be the last word on this and in fact, i think they will ensure it's not the last word on this. and you heard commonly harris begin
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to use this as an attack line against donald trump yesterday in north carolina. listen to what she said trump and i had our debate believe we have another debate because here's the thing in this election what's at stake could not be more important no, yesterday, we did learn how much money the harris campaign raised in the 24 hours after that debate, they rot in $47 million from 600,000 individual donors. of course, with the swell of fundraising with this well o of momentum comes the inevitable fears about over-confidence. the harris campaign says, there still very much the underdogs heading into this final stretch. >> all right. kevin liptack force someone to kevin great to see you. thank you. sarah. >> donald trump is not going to debate harris again, that is what he said. and posted.
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instead, he continues to attack the moderators and at the same time says he won and repeating incendiary and disputed claims that migrants are eating family pets, even though police and other local officials in the town where he says it happened have no reports at all to indicate what's happening residents are reporting that the migrants are walking off with the town's geese they take into geese and even walking off with their pets my dog's been taken my dog's for so this is going only happen. these people are the worst today, trump is set to speak to reporters in southern california. >> that is where we find our kristen holmes. what are you expecting, christine? >> well sara, it's donald trump, so we never really get too far out there on what we are expecting. but if it's any indication what we've heard from him in the last 48 plus hours. it's going to be a lot of re-litigating the debate. what we've seen from him is he trying to convince the american
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public, or at least his base that he was the winner of tuesday's night tuesday night's debate, despite the fact of what we have seen, which is largely polling indicates that was not the case. here is why he says he won't be doing a third debate because we've done two debates and because they were successful, there will be no third debate too late anyway, the voting's already begun, yet he gotta go out and vote obviously the voting hasn't begun all across the country, so it's not entirely a reason why you wouldn't do another debate. >> and i will just remind our viewers that republican operatives have said both publicly and privately, and many of these are people who are aligned with donald trump, who want him to win in november that they were disappointed with his performance on tuesday. now his reasoning is that he was the winner and that's why commonly harris called for a second debate immediately afterwards because she wanted a rematch. but it has been clear that he wants to say over and over again that not only was it unfair that he
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won despite the fact that it was unfair, the big question of course today is, what do we expect to hear from donald trump? i expect to hear a laundry list of the similar grievances. there's no topic on the actual press release for this, so that means it could be anything. the question, of course, for us is whether or not he takes questions. we are now at a critical time frame. and as kevin said, kamala harris is not the only one who believes that this race is going to come down to a handful of voters. the trump campaign, it's also very aware that there's going to be decided in the margins and he has traveled, planned. he's california now, but then he's going to nevada, and other state they believe is critical as we head into november standby to standby to see what kristen holmes stirs up with this press avail it's good to see you baghdad joining us right now is cnn senior political commentator, former obama administration official van jones. cnn political commentator and former white house communications director for donald trump. alyssa farah-griffin, team. it is good to see happening friday in here. okay. so let's start
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with some of the news we saw this morning about these ads that the da and see is now rolled out digital ads in times square and in the las vegas strip of basit. basically leaning into the taylor swift endorsement saying we're in ads, saying we are in our kamala era the hollywood reporter is saying that tailors swift signed off on their use of their use of her appeal malpractice, not to kind of seems to be the general view, alyssa, but what do you think of the real impact of taylor swift? are people making too much of it or too little? >> so generally, traditionally celebrity endorsements don't massively matter, but i'd argue telles with falls into a different category. she's a pop culture phenomenon in a way that so few have been before her coming off of this huge global tour, somebody who can packed stadiums across the country has to then extend her tour and she crosses generations. but what i'd say, her value add is get out the vote register to vote, you know, you cited this gsa statue already sent 400,000 people to go look at where they can register to vote once a couple
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of this would've been end of last year. she tweeted out a link and 30,000 people registered to vote because of it. so there's a huge power there and the bracelets the campaign made related to the taylor swift friendship bracelets, they sold out within a day. so there's clearly a value-add. there's a reason everyone wanted the taylor swift endorsement than an what should the campaign there's new reporting from isaac dovere that the harris campaign is looking for nontraditional outreach, non campaign rally how do you how do you fold these two things together a digital ad in times square is one thing, but i don't know. what do you say well, first of all, it gives us talking about it, but i think for those of us who think about politics all the time, it turns out some people do not watch cnn every day, all day why not listen? but like many of us here. so let's so next to politics, there's something called culture. >> and culture is massive entertainment is massive. we have one of arguably the chu biggest, the answer to biggest
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stars in the world lighting up their 300 million social media followers. we talk about 300,000 people go into it to a web through a government website which has never happened before. but she's got 300 million he's got more social media powers. the many countries have citizens when she likes that up. that is a massive, massive detonation in the world of culture. wars didn't, has people began to look over it. kamala harris, most people are not thinking about talking about politics. most of the time, but they're talking about until it swift every single day. and now they're talking about kamala harris. >> and by the way, only 67% of americans voted in 2020. there's a large portion of the population that just doesn't vote. so this is about activating people who don't pay attention, apollo. >> and when you, and when we have a very election like we have now, which is in margin of error election. it is this, it's these little margins there are enough swifties too. >> not only swing the election, but frankly to win the election i mean, if only talk about
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electoral world votes it's always finding misinformation that i should say that this cnc is taylor swift's for, for a news program thing on donald trump, we hear donald trump declared no more debates. >> do you think it take to take me behind it, take me take me behind the view is that do you think that is final or do you think he's like, i don't know one, laura loomer plane flight away from changing his view. so i predict that donald trump is actually going to reverse course on this he will very likely that momentum seems to be behind kamala harris, even though this race is statistically the neck and neck, she objectives won the last debate, i think right now he's thinking it's not in my interest to do that again, do you agree that it's not in his interest to do it again, i think he may need a moment. i don't know that i think he can win one, but i think that you when you've got this like seven weeks slog left, he made feel like he needs something to
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drive it and i would argue last time around he lost the first biden debate. he was much better in the second one. so there's a world in which he may come around and say actually we do need it, but he's going to say it should be on his terms that certain moderators and the like, and she's smart hard to put him on the defensive. >> what i mean, they're obviously comment harris says, let's do this again do you think they're okay. >> not having another debate though? >> well, she wins either way. she can just call him a chicken all day and talk about that. she walked them and walk them mean, look them in the move them some more and he has to pretend that he won when everybody knows he lost. if she debates. and again, he will be a different guy he usually screws up the first debate and gets better in second debate, i think he underestimated her. i think he had a bunch of nut jobs it's around him on his plane, getting them all psyched up about eating dogs and all kinds of crazy stuff. missile when he got there, he was not in the right mindset and she walked him i think he doesn't like losing and i think he knows he lost and i think if he does come back, he going to be much more formidable, but also kamala harris is getting better every single day, every time he
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touches the microphone, she gets better every speeches better. >> definitely better on a debate stage would say, from lab, my gosh she was better on the debate stage than almost anybody who's been on a debate stage sheet just wapt him and donald trump is the pac-man of politics. he ate through 16 republic republican governors, senators, like it was not and she was the matador this stop the ball. >> let's talk about let's refocus on one big issue because it's kind of come back into the spotlight next week, which is the economy. we've got the fed very likely looking to cut rates for the first time since early pandemic days what what does that mean for this point in the campaign? because it's a funky place. yeah, you've got potentially a good sign that kamala harris can talk about kind of quote-unquote, late-stage change, but you still have donald trump killing her when it comes to the economy and that slash in that snap poll
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after the bank, he was up 20 points on the economy even though the vast majority said she wanted debate but don't forget romney versus obama. >> people thought that romney was better on the economy than biden. that then then obama. but people believed that obama was going to fight for them harder. and so it's not just there's two things that are going on here. people might think, yeah, he might be better on the economy, but he's got to help the billionaire's is not going to help me. so that there's another set at set of numbers here that i think we're looking at, that she's doing a little bit better than she is on the bigger number so the economy is objectives. donald trump's strongest issue, but it comes down to kendi actually focus on that. aides have put him up to give speeches, focused on it, and he ends up diverting into all different directions. hannibal lecter. now ron on to eating animal. so candy, keep selling that message, or is she going to start to eat into the support he has on every candidate has a strong points in the weak points. economy weaker for her her abortion, weaker for him. they're now in a tug of war over immigration. he's having to talk about dogs and cats to try to figure out some way to
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change the subject from the fact that he actually got in the way of a solution on immigration. it's now his border crisis. want to talk about that, so he's making up lies, racist lies about haitians eating animals so everybody's got strengths and weaknesses, which you want to do is middle did he get your weaknesses as much as you can? which is why he's flip-flopping all over the place on abortion. and you lean into your strengths, but what you saw in north carolina yesterday was was an extreme jordan every event i mean, people were for hours four hours aligns were like, i don't know, half a mile long. a mile people that there is an energy level there when north carolina it's back in play because of what kamala harris is doing. he's got to be worried about that. >> i'm really curious what what next week brings in terms of the conversation around the economy, because i have, i will say i just think the response i've gotten to why isn't she doing better in the economy or why wasn't biden do mentally economy. they've gotten from administration officials and from democratic electeds it has been unsatisfying to this point, which is we just haven't gotten our message.
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and at some point i'm asking, where's the expiration date on that reasoning? because at some point there has to but let's do this again next week. >> fortunately. >> thanks, guys all right. >> coming up for us. >> vladimir putin issuing a new and big threat overnight and president biden weighs giving ukraine the green light to strike deeper into russia. >> also breaking overnight 33,000 workers walked off the job and a strike that could have major sure. impacts on the u.s. economy. and a story that is leaving me with more questions than answers. a man removes a lego piece from his knows that has been there since the night yes. >> i said got news for you are pretty odd yeah. what are the kinds we could run on the news before then? >> that would never happened if i got news for you from airs tomorrow at nine on cnn and streaming next day on max. >> you ever noticed the more
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saturday at 8:00 on tnt right. happening now, 33,000 boeing employees went on strike overnight. union members overwhelmingly rejected a proposed contract with the aircraft manufacturer. this is going to have a huge impact on airplane production and frankly, on us exports. boeing is one of the country's biggest exporters of anything. seen as vanessa yurkevich is with us this morning with the latest here, vanessa yes this was a deal that the union said was the best that they can negotiate. >> and boeing said it was a historic offer, but 95% of memberships said we don't think so. and 96% said we're going on strike and that's what you are seeing. this morning. we caught up with jim bloomer, who was on the picket line early this good morning. listen to why he said
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that he voted no on this deal and yes. to strike the matter is we're old a lot more for what we do if boeing touts that we're the best in the industry they need to treat us the best in the industry. >> there's a lot of stuff that just doesn't add up their math is crazy. >> it just people aren't seeing it. >> they want more for what we're asked to do and just to take you back to what was on the table, 25% in wage increases the union wanted 40. >> they also wanted a return to traditional pensions, but boeing offered more in there for one k and they also got increased job security dirty. this was contingent on this deal being passed. it was not. so that leaves up in the air. john, whether or not a new plane is going to go into production in washington state that was critical job security. and as you mentioned, the economic impact boeing alone
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generates about 79 billion in the u.s economy. and there's 1.6 million offshoots of jobs, just from boeing production. and it remains to be seen whether or not this strike is going to drag out as it drags out longer and longer, you start to feel the economic ripple effect to suppliers and also to deliveries of airplanes two us airlines to foreign air airplane airlines were on day one, john, things can change very quickly, but it also could drag out and cause major economic headaches. john something that everyone will be watching very closely. vanessa yurkevich. thank you so much. >> sara. >> all right. new this morning, president biden is poised to approve giving ukraine the okay to use long-range missiles to fire into russia. the risks font from putin is extreme were wild collision here look at this caught on camera camera
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favorite pair of jeans today. i'm taylor available on the apple app store or android straight days in changing jayden, why i'm not changed sexual orientation of not changing political party. >> we're going to go to the house. with what we got here. okay. >> car saturday the october 5th on cnn putin is promising war with nato if ukraine fires long-range missiles into russia, but it's a move that ukraine's top officials have long called for and would require, of course, approval from western nations who have been supplying the weapons president putin warning that if the west does give the greenlight, then russia will be at war with the alliance. >> cnn's chief national security correspondent, alex marquardt joining us now with more the biden administration is considering giving their approval correct. for long-range missiles to be used by ukraine yeah.
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>> sara, the u.s. has already given ukraine permission to fire american weapons into russia. but at a shorter range. so what's at issue here is whether or not the u.s. will give ukraine the permission to fire the biggest missile yet that the u.s. has given to ukraine. it's called atacms that go some 200 miles house or 300 kilometers, whether ukraine can fire that into russia. now the biden ministration has been seen by ukraine is being somewhat slow or reluctant to give them those permissions, give them those weapons. and ukraine has had to balance their gratitude for getting these weapons with really the impatience feelings they could do more if they had these permissions, had these weapons sooner. so this is going to be discussed between president biden and the british prime minister keir starmer here in washington. today the brits have a role in this as well because alongside the atacms that the ukrainians want to use, there's also a british missile called the storm shadow that ukraine wants the brits to give them permission to use as well. now we have seen some signs that the u.s and britain might be willing to do this. we
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heard secretary blinken in kyiv and in poland earlier this week saying that as the battlefield changes, so too does us foreign policy and policy towards these weapons evolve? this is something we've heard him say in the past before. the american position changes. now my colleague kevin liptak is reporting that we are not expecting an announcement out of that meeting today, but that doesn't mean that it couldn't come at some point in the near future, ukrainian officials have been pushing for this very hard recently, top ukrainian officials came to washington to present a list of targets that would use with these american atacms. i spoke with a ukrainian defense minister at the time. he told me that it included airfields that could be targeted inside russia that are being used to hit at ukraine. but at the same time, sara, there are significant american concerns concerns that you mentioned about the fear of escalation. putin. now warning that if the u.s. gives ukraine permission to use these weapons, that russia would then
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be at war with nato. so there are those concerns over russia escalating the fight against ukraine and against nato countries, their concerns about the supply of these missiles. there is not an finot supply of them and some us officials believed that they could be used with more effectively inside of russian occupied ukraine, like crimea. and then there's also the concern that they might not actually move the needle that russia has moved many of its targets beyond the range of these atacms and that's where we start to see the daylight between the u.s. and ukrainian military strategy, but no doubt sara, if washington made this decision at president biden made this decision, it would send a strong signal about american support for ukraine alex marquardt. thank you so much for your reporting on this this morning so new post-debate poll numbers are showing just how tight the race for the white house remains. >> and trouble at takeoff. a close call as two passenger planes nearly collide, we have the details
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helps families say, but the 60% on family-friendly hotels, so many great trips we might just leave here with another vacation baby. >> take it easy harris and youtube for motor down, please. >> wasn't alito garner haby price, priceline but jell-o amelia earhart be a practical joke history books, in practical jokers all new thursday's attack on tbs set your dvrs now new this morning, hillary clinton is now speaking out about the state of the presidential race describing how she felt when biden dropped out and kamala harris jumped in its recorded as an epilogue to the book that comes out next week. and she shared it with msnbc also wondered how i would feel if another woman ever took the torch that i had carried so far and ran on with it with some
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little voice deep down inside whisper that should have been me now, i know the answer. after i got off the phone with the vice president, i looked at bill with a huge smile and said this is exciting i felt promise. i felt possibility. it was exhilarating we are also getting a look at the first major poll since tuesday's debate, the new national reuters ipsos poll has harris ahead by five points. >> let's take a look at that right now, cnn's harry enten is here with much more harry, can you give us some context around that margin and the movement that you're seeing in polling post-debate yeah, i think it's rather important kate to point out that the reuters ipsos poll has actually been one of harris is best. >> so look, you got that five point margin, right? that 47, 42 that you mentioned post to pay, but that's actually not a lot of movement from where we were in august when harris is up by four now is movement from
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everywhere in late july when harris was up by two. but the bottom line here is this, at least in the first polling that we're getting post this debate between donald trump and kamala harris maybe lights, slight, slight movement in harris's direction, but not overwhelmingly so so which i don't think is really much of a surprise. >> buys given the 15, 50 nation, we are right now. but the bottom line is the average of polls harris had a slight nationally and at this particular point, i think she'll probably hold on to that at least based upon this initial signal didn't hurt her maybe didn't also wasn't, you know, the debt the nail in the coffin for donald trump? >> hmm, candidness, see either which is exactly kind of what people expected with this debate in the 50, 50 nation we are in right now, what is the biggest difference? so you see in polls these, these polls compared to those that came after the biden trump debate in june yeah. >> i mean, look, it all comes down to mental state and being able to deal with challenges.
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alright, so mental sharp, i can deal with challenges. look at this back in the post june debate, right? look at that 52% of voters said that in fact, trump was mentally sharp and deal with challenges. look, it's joe biden number. it was just 26% now, look at the difference here. look at this 58% in the poll september debate, paul said that harris was mentally sharp and can deal with challenges trump's number actually dropped below 50% down to just 46. so that 52 to 46 so this was the big change that i think a lot of democrats are hoping for when they switched out biden for harris, it came down kind of mental sharpness and the bottom line is the clear majority of voters believed that kamala harris is mentally sharpening deal with challenges and the number for trump that declined by six points between post-june and post september. i think that's a very welcome sign for democrats on the top line, maybe not so much movement nationally, but underneath the hood. i think democrats really have to like what they say it's great to see you, harry. >> thank you >> with us now, is former missouri secretary of state and army veteran jason kander.
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always great to see you. our viewers, many will remember you ran for senate in missouri in 2016, got very close in a red state there. so you've got a lot of experience in electoral politics. jason, you wrote an op-ed where you said that years ago, vice president harris, before she was vice president made you feel seen? what do you mean by that all, good to see you again, john kate to both of you? >> yeah. >> look, what i really was trying to write about was the fact that i'm not close friends with kamala harris and we know each other. we've been work acquaintance's. we both ran for senate that same year. and i think it's important particularly as people are getting to know kamala harris to learn a little about what she is like when she's not on television, when she's not in a debate, beaten donald trump like he stole something, like what she's actually like as a person. and what she's like as a person is somebody who when i
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dropped out of public life, dropped out of politics help for post-traumatic stress disorder at the va there was a period where everybody was calling. i mean, everybody in the world was calling because i was a public person. and then there was a period where the world which i had given it permission to do, sort of forgot about me. and that was okay. i was working on therapy and that kind of thing. but kamala harris has had no real motivation to continue to check in on me, but she did she did what? a friend would do even though we weren't very close and so now that she's running for president, i went ahead and thought it was best to tell the world about that experience. >> she kept on checking and tell us more about that and what it meant to you sure yeah. >> i was a guy who at that point was trying to navigate life post being a presidential candidate. >> so i'm might go into costco and trying to figure out how to be helpful around the house and she was calling me to get my thoughts on veterans policy, get my thoughts on national
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security policy. and as i pointed out in the piece, i don't know that she necessarily needed my thoughts on veterans policy or national security policies, maybe i was helpful, maybe i wasn't. >> but she was doing what a friend would do for another person, which is basically saying you still have value to me and i'm gonna make sure to communicate that so i think that's the kind of person that not only would we all want to be friends with, but it's also the kind of person who we would want to lead anything or corporation, a non-profit a pta, our country and i would just ask people to imagine for a moment, donald trump calling anybody to make them feel anything other than somebody who he finds useful to him? >> i don't think that's a practice he often engages in he talked about veterans issues, issues in general, this is where you work, you work on veterans issues now, every day what is the terrain you think that veterans want to see this campaign being waged over what are those issues? >> and who is speaking to them
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well, first of all, i mean, you won't be shocked to hear that, i believe kamala harris is the one speaking to them i think that would veterans want is to see candidates who understand them as more than political props in a campaign. >> you know, when i think about the difference kamala harris and donald trump, kamala harris, they're both people who didn't serve. but kamala harris is the person who didn't serve and his genuinely interested in your service is genuinely interested in learning more about the military because it further our ability to do her job, not somebody who just puts you on a pedestal and thinks of you as a hero who was in vulnerable or in donald trump's case, penny's, you, donald trump is a different person. donald trump is somebody who most veterans recognized as the guy who finds out you served, feels immediately insecure, then tells you about how he was going to be a green beret, but he figured he has a problem with authority and he would have just ended up punching out is drill sergeant to drink
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basic, so he never bothered joint. then he takes out his phone and he shows you pictures of his guns because he thinks that's how he's going to relate to you. >> we can tell the difference between the two personalities you mentioned. you are not a candidate, haven't been for some time what do you think the future might hold for you? can you see yourself getting back into elected politics? could you see yourself serving in a potential harris administration if we're come to pass very flattering that people still ask these questions. i've spent a lot of years working very hard to get people to think about me this way. i have a great job in the last several years, i have made a greater impact on the world by building villages of tiny houses for homeless veterans by actually getting involved in afghan tuition efforts. starting an organization that has gotten over 2000 afghans out of the country, including my translators, family. he now lives down the street. and as i rattled these things off, i'm starting to realize i sound like a politician who wants to
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run for something so let me stop rattling in either i have. >> no interest in either. and really, you know, if at some point to things happen which is my kids stopped being interested in hanging out with me where you know, there are 11 and four. so i think i got a few years and two if the other thing that happens is oh, did i get the thumbs up on this technology works well, i'm a thumbs up about how my life is right now. the other thing would be breaking new ground on cnn the, point i was going to make. the second point is just that if at some point i no longer feel i can make a greater impact out of office, which is how i felt the last few years. then maybe. but, you know, politicians like to say that's not what i'm thinking about right now. and actually john, that's all they're thinking about. that's actually not what i'm thinking about. >> i, feel like a whole lot just happened i feel like a lot just happened right there with the fireworks may be telling us
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one thing in this thing. and maybe work through some issues. there were maybe you announced you were running and maybe you announced your word there's a lot going on with people will be analyzing that far. >> your webex ryland hunter them? write your stories. i go hug the kids. go hug. >> good to see you. good to see you. happy birthday to my mom oh, you birthday. >> shall we say, you know what, who would do that? >> a politician, someone running away? >> happy birthday. he was getting jason carroll great to see you. thank you very much on fire this morning. maybe you should take over the jon stewart role. i think you bet your neck. >> that's once a week. that's like once a week. >> not trying to get trying to get rid of days a week, you
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know, not morning, fulton county prosecutor leading georgia's election subversion case against donald trump, expected to defy a subpoena from a state senate committee investigating her conduct. >> that's according to local reports. nick valencia live at the state capitol in atlanta, where a hearing on fani willis, this is conduct and relationship with former special prosecutor, nathan wade is set to begin soon nic, let us know what's going on now yeah, different kinds of fireworks here that we're expecting this morning. >> good morning, sara. at the core of the argument you minutes that we're going to hear today is whether or not this panel has the authority to compel somebody to show up to testify the chairman of this committee believes that they do and they've issued a subpoena for district attorney mean fani willis, but she is not going to show up. not expected to anyway, and it's a not so veiled signal to this committee that she thinks it's more about political theater. and let's be clear this nine member panel was initiated to investigate potential impropriety by the district attorney during the drama that played out that we
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all saw earlier this year in the trump criminal case, they believed that there was a potential so misuse of public funds and they want fani willis to show up here to talk about that. i did speak to a democrat on this panel, six republicans, three democrats late last night. he said does that we should expect some political theater and perhaps even a legal filing from the panel to try to get a judge to compel fani willis to show up. this hearing begins at 9:30. sara. all right? >> yesterday, two charges against donald trump were dropped in that same case in georgia what does that mean for the case going forward somewhat of an awkward ruling because judge scott mcafee doesn't technically have jurisdiction over trump's portion of the case. >> so these three counts which were trump was facing in the indictment, a total of initially 13 counts. they're not technically applied to him, but they are to his co-defendants, john eastman and shawn, still they were among the 16 so-called fake electors that tried to subvert the electoral college. those three counts related to filing false documents have been thrown out. and even though it's not
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technically applied to donald trump's part of the case that's not stopped his attorney from touting it as a victory. sara all right. >> nick valencia live there for us with all the details. appreciate it coming up still for us, couldn't the key to winning the election be found on tiktok we'll hear from the new generation of rafah the vote organizers on this this is a woman's this is what makes it up and it long lost lego and why a man found it didn't his nose decades of later, all that yep, we are or jaunes, but first to the heroes in arizona, thousands of children are in the foster care system. many of them native american and struggling to connect with their routes and their heritage. this week's cnn hero it's trying to change that abundantly blessed within six months, i became a mom to four children that were all under the age of 2-years-old but that's where i kind of knew we needed to make a change i started out just providing
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basic resources clothes and shoes, and diapers i really wanted to great family engagement, cultural experience when we can incorporate our culture and you have that sense of identity. your world changes. >> i had non-native foster parents and grandparents raising children, even subgroup homes se how do i get my kids connect it to culture? i don't know where to go there's thousands of native children that are in care and could be connected i want kids to come in actually feel like their sense of identity and cultures right there impactful work in action and learn more. go to cnnheroes.com will be a cnn hero. >> he is brought to you by served for the number one
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obama bed in the past, he would not have been able to do any of those things >> what everyone by one pair, get one free for back-to-school vision works. >> see the difference? >> awkward question. is there going to be anything leftover oh, absolutely. >> my kids don't know what they want. you know, who knows what she wants. >> with in power, we get all of our financial questions answered. >> so you don't have to worry him empower. >> what's next oh, good job. >> we will t
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underscore.com so this morning, the faa is investigating a close call at an airport in nashville, a southwest airlines plane crossed the same runway as it aloud us get airlines flight forcing the alaska crew to break. >> so suddenly they blew out their tires there were 176 passengers, six crew members on board. luckily, no one was hurt alright train versus tank. train wins. this happened in south carolina like a movie thing. i train crashed into this tractor trailer hauling a tank goose creek. the truck apparently was stuck on the tracks. a witness told cnn affiliate w csc, the driver did get out of the way barely five seconds before the crash ashton amazingly, luckily, again, no one was hurt okay. 32-year-old man, just dislodged a lego that had been stuck in here it's knows since
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he was six, andy norton says and put the dot up there in the 19. he has suffered from asthma and sleep apnea four years. his doctor recommended blowing his nose in the shower to take advantage of the steam and humidity and after six months of that, it finally war, norton says, he can finally breathe from that side of his nose again, an amazingly he finally finished the lego model oh, that he'd been working on since the 1990s. no, i was a version of an atari i just wanted to tell you both as the father of two boys and as someone who was once a boy myself, there was only one place legos are supposed to go. i don't blame the guy. i'm we did with them what you're supposed to do what everyone here and i said is nodding their head in agreement. you all know it's true. >> i just i have can't they have not put the girls have not put legos in their nose to my knowledge, yes. >> don't have a closed mindset but does anyone had the question as to why didn't the blowing of the nose happen
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earlier? i am that is a little concerned about what happens is the 90 years young for you, because i just want to do the math he's 32 now he was six on this occurred that is 26 years later, 38 in the metric system i stopped every the last one. word, it's driving me today. >> thank you back to the. >> presidential election. tiktok, playing a huge role in politics, especially for gen z, young content creators are using it to show support for both kamala harris and for donald trump is cnn's donie o o'sullivan sat down with some of them to take a look at what they're up to. >> what's your most viewed video on for more patriot than those who voted blue for the trump flag in my office you think you just fell out of a coconut tree this year around 8 million young people will turn 18 and get the chance to vote for the very first time in total, about 41 million members of gen z,
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those under 27 will be eligible to vote in the 2024 presidential election. >> more than 45% of those gen z voters will be young people of color according to several a nonpartisan research group joining me now is carolyn duit president and executive director of rock the vote. i want you to forgive me because i did not know that roc the vote was still around. i remember it in 1992, back in the day obviously not gen z. i'm a gen xer i have a question for you. what are some of the key issues that you're hearing from gen z as they prepare for the 2024 election? >> well, it's so good to see you. thanks for having me as far as issues that young people care about we're seeing you know, this is not a monolithic group, but not surprising. gun violence, climate change abortion issues of equality. so racial equity student debt,
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really the reality is gen z is not a, they're not single issue voters. they understand the sophistication in the fact that all of these issues are interrelated, they're looking for candidates who are proposing bold solutions and platforms all right, so we've just gotten word that taylor swift has allowed the campaign to use her famous line. and now she's talking about being in the kamala era, which is what they're going to use. they're going to be having but these digital billboards in vegas. and in times square with taylor swift in the game. if you will how much impact might she had? because historically celebrity endorsements haven't had a huge impact on the actual numbers at the polls. the numbers of young voters do you think she's a game changer yeah. >> i mean, this is very exciting lesson for over 30 years, as you mentioned, right? >> rock the boat has been
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