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tv   Anderson Cooper 360  CNN  September 23, 2024 9:00pm-10:00pm PDT

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there's nostalgia diddy is diddy for a reason it wasn't because we didn't love his music. it wasn't because we didn't wear sean john. he was a fourth pop culturally for decades. and so i think some of that is just sort of read deflection on what we thought did he was and through his music, i think there's also lover of curiosity from younger generations who may not have been around are cognizant of the force that did he was when he was at the peak of his powers. so i think there's curiosity and there may be a little bit of people trying to use the streaming as a way of pushing back against the system. and we saw that happened. morgan waved in the country singer soon after he was saw on video using the n word, his album sales actually spiked despite the fact he is using a racial slur and some people were using it as a way of pushing back against the system and so i do think there may be some elements of that when it comes to the streaming, but i would like to think most people who are doing, are doing it from nostalgia
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>> how is it reasons because daddy was a beloved figure for a long time lz granderson. thank you so much for joining. >> great to hear second debate, the former president says, no. political power. couple, james carville and mary matalin join us for their take on the campaign plus the latest from israel and lebanon after the deadliest israeli airstrikes on hezbollah targets in a generation good evening, thanks for joining us. the former president is holding the second of two events today in western pennsylvania, his trip through the commonwealth shadowed by a mobile billboard for the democratic national committee reading, there's no debate. donald trump's a chicken. the message alluding to his decision to opt out of a second debate with vice president harris, the faceoff
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would err on october 23, cnn, again, she's already said yes and invited him to do the same time me on the debate stage let's have another debate. >> is more to talk about him. voters of america deserve to hear the conversations that i think we should be having on substance, on his shoes, on policy well, his answer of now is no. and here's how justified it she's done one debate. >> i've done two. it's too late to do another. i'd love to in many ways, but it's too late. the voting is cast by that he means early voting, apparently though it's hard to see why that would preclude debating again, the campaigning after all, good because on until election day doesn't stop when the early vote is cast. >> in any event, he's also again calling the legitimacy of the vote into question, posting this on social media quoting now, the democrats are talking about how they're going, how they're working so hard to get millions of votes for americans living overseas actually, they're getting ready to cheat now he's referring seems to a program that's been around
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since the 1980s for getting absentee ballots to american service members and americans living overseas. that happens all the time. quoting again from the post, he's saying without any evidence that it amounts to stealing our military votes a foreign president is also making news with his answer to this question if you're not successful this time, do you see yourself running again in four years no, i don't know. i don't i think that that will be that will be it. i don't see that at all. i think hopefully we're going to be successful. >> mr. president, thank you for the interview. i appreciate very much his tone there, notwithstanding new polling tonight from the new york times and siena college shows him competitive or better in three sunbelt states, leading the vice president in arizona and ahead, but within the margin of error, meaning no clear leader in georgia and north carolina. >> no clear leader either nationally in cnn's latest poll of polls, which shows the vice president ahead by three but it's pulling border issue which could be factoring to a decision the harris campaign is just now weighing namely whether to go there late this
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week. we'll have more on that shortly. new developments as well in the case of the republican who wants to be north carolina's governor, but also once referred to himself as a black nazi on a pornography forum, where he also said he'd like it if slavery was brought back and he would like to have some slaves mark robinson, that's his name over the weekend, several senior staff members of his quit. one of the state's republican us centers, thom tillis told cnn he would not be campaigning for him. and late today, republican senator and vice presidential nominee, j.d. vance, would not answer when pressed on whether the former president still supports the man he once called dr. martin luther king junior on steroids as i've said, that is mark robinson's case to make to the people of north carolina. i'm not going to make it for them. and the people in north carolina, they get to be the judge's of whether they believe him or not. it's really that simple. let's focus on the real issues that affect north carolina so a lot to talk about, starting with cnn's priscilla alvarez on that significant potential change to vice president harris's campaign schedule. so what are you learning about this potential trip to the border
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well, anderson, some campaign officials remain concerned that the former president donald trump, as you laid out, is still leading on the issue of immigration and border security. >> but source this is telling me they also see an opportunity they think that they can start to close that gap. and so they are weighing a potential visit to the u.s.-mexico border when she is slated to visit arizona on friday. now, of course, the vice president has visited the border as vice president, she's also done so as california senator and attorney general and sources tell me that no final decision has been made yet on this potential stop, but it is certainly significant because it is telling of the campaign see in the issue of border security continuing to crop up as a top issue among voters. and if she were to go, she would go at a time when border crossings our low the lowest they've been since 2020. of course, the administration has been citing executive action over the summer for the plummeting of those border crossings. and it
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would give her the opportunity to talk about that in battleground, arizona, where again, as you mentioned, former president donald trump continues to hold a lead in those polls. so this it'd be a notable stop if she were to make it still significant though, that she's going to arizona when the polling is so tight. >> so alvarez, thanks. cnn's danny freeman is at the trump event in the western pennsylvania town of indiana. so what was formed president's message to pennsylvania voters today? >> simpson, the view when it comes to former president trump's trip to western pennsylvania was the economy, the economy, the comedy photo comes to this particular rally. he only started speaking maybe a little over ten minutes ago and at times he has spoken about inflation, yes. afghanistan other issues that he and the campaign of trying to drill down against vice president harris. however, he has talked about a leak last debate that he had with vice president harris are complaining about how the moderators treated me also said that vice president harris, he felt was terrible at the debate. he also criticized vice
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president parents is interview with oprah that took place in the past few days as well. noting that he and oprah used to be close, but earlier in the day former president trump actually made a rare off the record stop when it comes to a grocery store you actually paid for a woman's groceries at the store in front of cameras. really making it an opportunity to comment on the state of inflation in this particular country at this moment before that, he also held a roundtable with farmers and he was using that opportunity to talk about his ambitious tariff plans at one point actually threatening but the company, john deere, saying that he would put 200% tariffs on quote, everything that you want to sell into the united states. if the company moves production to mexico. so we'll see if he continues on that economic message tonight so far at this rally in indiana anderson, and there's another trump campaign event that will take place in pennsylvania, right? >> yeah, that's right. anderson, our own alayna treene, she actually confirmed earlier this evening that we now know former president trump intends to go back to butler,
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pennsylvania on october 5. we knew that he had been planning to go back to butler since he was shot at that rally back in july, but we didn't know specifically details. now, learning he's going back there on october 5th and i'll just note anderson that particular event is particularly important to a lot of trump's supporters here in pennsylvania. i've spoken to them. many folks who have said to me that they've actually determined they wanted to volunteers step up and actually help out the campaign specifically because they were potentially at that rally in butler, pennsylvania. it has been galvanizing, especially for trump's supporters here in western pennsylvania anderson, danny freeman, thanks very much on the stand was ashley etienne, vice president harris is former communications director cnn, senior data reporter harry harry enten, also republican strategist, doug heye and ana navarro. and is a harris supporter. so let's talk about the polling, the ellipse, all looks good for trump. it looks good for trump. and i think it's part of a larger trend. last week we were discussing those great lake battleground states, michigan, pennsylvania, wisconsin those
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polls looked good for kamala harris indeed, if you take an average across those three states, kamala harris has a small advantage at two point advantage, you look across those sunbelt battleground states. so i think there are a lot of democrats and old these polls are too good for trump, blah, blah, blah. the bottom line is, even when you average across all the polls, not just polls that come out today, you look across those sunbelt battleground states, georgia, arizona, north carolina, on average, donald i'll trump is ahead by a point and a half. and i think that speaks to a larger issue that the harris campaign has, which is she seems to be doing worse than joe biden did four years ago in states in which the democratic coalition is highly reliant on voters of color. so in north carolina and georgia, that would be african-americans out in arizona, that would be hispanics. she is behind his pace on with those particular she's holding her own with white voters. and i think that's enlarged part why she is holding her own in the great lakes up and michigan, pennsylvania, wisconsin, because the democratic coalition is whiter, you were saying with black is a black man or black women. >> it's black men in particular who she's struggling with. >> she's also particularly struggling among younger black voters. this is something that
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we've seen in the polling, which is that among young voters overall. yes, she is doing better than joe biden was at the beginning of the year, right? just before joe biden dropped out of the race. but she's doing significantly worse than joe biden did four years ago. so it's a very interesting sort of different coalition, one in which the electoral map at this point is still at least a little bit undetermined. >> ashley, why do you think she is not doing well? with those groups that harry was talking about well, i can think it's actually still quite early. >> i mean, the polls are a little all over the place. i always caution over-investing polls, especially at this time because there was never a poll that showed in 2016 that donald trump was going to win. but in addition to that, what you're really looking at it this stage is the trend line. she continues to trend up, close the gap with many of these key constituencies and donald trump remains flat. in fact, he's still at 50% unfavorables. i mean, that's incredibly high. so i think there's still a lot of opportunities. opportunities for the vice president, but
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she's got she's got a lot of room to make up for a lot of room to grow, but she's got to accelerate the pace. >> doug, i mean, as the now the republican governors association, they pull financial support from mark robinson in north carolina's several senior staffers, staffers have stepped down obviously, i mean, he's got nothing else to do so. i assume he's just going to stay in the race, but does is this thing i mean, is it over for him i think the race was probably over before thursday's revelations. >> certainly after the kfile revelations on thursday, the race went from not being on life support to being officially declared dead. and i think there are two reasons for that. one is you know, what the staffers at left? you were not really on the 800m if you were looking at the mark robinson campaign, there were a lot of very smart professional people who decided to stay away because they knew, they knew there was trouble coming and whomever robinson is able to bring on if anybody now wouldn't be the 800m, they'd probably be the q, r or s team. and it doesn't matter because the race is over. what does matter is whether not this is
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going to have an impact on the presidential race. and it certainly will have an impact down ballot for the counsel of states. and there's a targeted congressional seat in north carolina, one as well. that's why north carolinians are nervous. it's why republicans in washington are nervous. they've had to concede a gubernatorial seat. bad enough, but this could have much bigger implications first lady milan i need to trump has been pretty much out of the public eye for most of this campaign. >> obviously, she showed up briefly at the republican convention. she didn't speak there she did speak at two political fundraisers for the log cabin republicans, which is a gay group. it's been disclosed now that she was paid more than 200 $37,000 for just one of those events. and what sort of unusual as the president of the log cabin told cnn earlier this month that the group did not put up the money for her to speak and the disclosure form did not give any more information about the source of the payment didn't say whether or not he knew about the money, but as far as
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i know, i mean, does it does it make sense? i mean, why is she understand? there's a lot of grift in this family, but what why is she receiving this money? she's the former first lady you would think there's some things she might do for a larger issue other than just getting paid married to donald trump? i'm not sure i blame her for trying to get as much money as she can for putting up with him and pretended to be part and parcel of this. look, she's obviously a full participant in the trump family grift. just this in the last few days, we have heard heard about donald trump selling crypto donald trump selling collectible coins. melania trump, with this memoir book, which is about this thick and now she's selling christmas ornaments for $90 each cheap christmas ornaments
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were $90 each. it's really i find that incredibly tacky and unsee because the people that they are preying on. and when i say they, i mean, trump's writ large because they're all into this grift or the poor people are their supporters, their followers, who they are using to pay for their luxuries and to pay for their money. but it is tacky that supposedly people who have this much money are out there turning mar-a-lago and turning this campaign until the home shopping network. it is frankly tacky harry, just in terms of the numbers. i mean, if this polling holds up, i mean, do you think it is early to ashley's point? i mean, i think republicans thought it was early last week when those polls up in the great lakes, we're looking good for kamala harris. i think there are a lot of democrats who might argue it looks early now, look, we still have, you know, well over a month ago. yes. things could definitely change at this particular point going forward, but the bottom line is this has
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been one of the steady as racist on record, right? if you were to ask me a month ago, who was ahead in the national polls, i would have said kamala harris was slightly ahead. i would've said she was slightly ahead in those great lake battleground polls, but the bottom line is this race anderson it's the closest that i've ever seen. and you can see it so well on the electoral map, right? let's just say that we believe the polling for a second and say we're going to assign each of the states to the person who is the polling leader, even at the lead, is very, very small. what do we get? we get kamala harris with 276 electoral votes to donald trump's 262. that would be the closest race hey, since 2000, right? in terms of the electoral college. and of course that map is because kamala harris holds in those great lake battleground states, while donald trump does well along the sunbelt, but here's the thing to keep in mind. if you were to look at this map right now and apply the errors, the polling errors that occurred in 2020, right? when the polling underestimated donald trump, he'd win in all of those swing states, right? he'd win in those great lake battleground states, for example. but if you were apply the error that occurred in 2022 when the polling actually
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underestimated democrats kamala harris would win and all those swing states, that's what we're talking about. we're told that that's what you're showing that poll right there is that poll. that poll, that map, that map. that map is if the polls are exactly correct and what i'm telling you anderson, is the polling is rarely exactly correct. we have a margin of error. it's there for a reason and the bottom line is at this particular point, either candidate cohen, this election rather recently, actually, do you think next week's vice presidential debate matters much for either, i mean, for either candidate for either irs saad i definitely actually do. i believe that walz is on the ticket because he's going to enable are sort of engage voters that are those disaffected republican voters, independent voters democrats that lean more right? i mean, that's his primary job on this ticket, is to engage those folks, get them activated, get them galvanized and excited
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about this ticket. so he's got to actually achieve that while at the same time undermining j.d. vance and confidence in him, which he's already done himself. so there's not a whole lot of work that he is due there, but i definitely think that he he is bridging this cultural divide with these reporters that i mean, excuse me, with these voters that democrats have had trouble turning out in the last two election cycles. so that's his primary job, and that's going to be his primary audience. so yes, it actually it does matter and i just want to play something that the foreign president said it as rally tonight about what would happen if harris wins the election i mean, somebody i heard the other day, pretty smart person. and you think about it and it could be true. they said we don't win this election. that may never be another election in this country could happen how do you interpret that i mean, i budweiser is he quoting himself because i feel like he said that before in various ways. >> i feel like you're right. i
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mean, i feel like he has told us that he would be a dictator for a day, for one day, which is a little scary. i feel like has told us that if he wins, there's never going to be a need for another election. and so i guess this is recycling the same point. i don't ask me to interpret donald trump anderson, frankly, i don't speak trump. i think the man the man is talking in july it makes absolutely no sense i really don't know how any american can go and stand in a rally for hours and hours to hear to hear what's like, i might as well be reading dr. seuss because that makes a hell of a lot more sense than anything that comes out of donald trump's mounts. and frankly, given all the things he says about hannibal lecter and sharp it's in batteries and windmills him threatening that there's not going to be any more elections as one of the lesser stupid things he says, all right, thanks everybody, by the way, i read dr. seuss pretty much every day these days, it's quite enjoyable coming up next james
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carville and mary matalin on their new documentary living life as a famously bipartisan political couple. and of course we'll talk to him about the state of the race every minute i think about who's going to win is a minute. >> i'm not thinking of how we can win also tonight with the race in georgia as close as it is, we're joined by the former democratic candidate for governor there, stacey abrams with fast create factory, great visual solutions to perfect your process your statement. my moderate to severe crohn's symptoms kept me out of the picture. now, i have sky risk. i've got concerned picture, feels significant symptom relief at for weeks with sky rosie, including less
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switch today! home served.com tv on the edge sunday at nine on cnn five, good things. listen wherever you get your podcasts former president speaking tonight, just north east of pittsburgh, his second pennsylvania stop of the day moments ago as you heard, he raised the possibility that a harris victory could be the country's last ever election he cited, and i quote somebody i heard the other day. >> i mean, a pretty smart person also tonight, breaking news, vice president harris, weighing a trip to the southern border on friday plus new polling and much more when we get perspective now from the husband and wife team of mary matalin and james carville, they're the focus of a new cnn films documentary airing october 5 seven eastern title carville winning is everything stupid? i want to start with you with just quick polls, nbc, cbs, both released national polls showing vice president and leading nationally new york
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times sienna poll shows a foreign prison ahead and sun belt states, arizona and georgia in north carolina, when you see these numbers, what do you think? >> you and i say this and it sounds could pose to say all kinds of different things. i've just taken initially tree or learn maybe 2008 out of a poll showed a really tight ration, 2000s, very tight. 2004 would really tight. 12 was really tight 16 was clearly a lot tie to of public average was only like 2% i mean, trump underperformed in those 16 and dry in some break one way or the other. >> but i don't think that we're going to get a good sensitive to polling but wait, haven't it really hasn't. what is it your sense that who's winning, what's your sense right now? you know, every day i think about who's going to win every minute. i think about who's going to win is a minute. i'm not thinking of how we can win.
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and i just can't of course, like everybody else i've seen the poll. i've talked two people about them, but about like if harris does 123, she can't win. if she doesn't do 123, she can lose. and that's honestly the best i can come up with. >> what did you think of your former boss, dick cheney, endorsing harris? >> i love that to cheney's turned from darth vader america like last night, nancy pelosi's people who we love dig james i'm the one who drove them to 11 11% as darth i i have friends on all sides of this. >> and that's who with deep convictions and that's as it should be, and that's why i say everybody should quit listening two opinions because there's as many of them as other things. >> and i just like think for yourself, why. >> i mean, when you look at just the last couple of months, you have donald trump talking about haitians eating cats and dogs you know, his kennedy
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north carolina revealed is talking about himself as a black nazi on a porn site. he brought a 911 conspiracy theorists to not 9-11 memorial ceremonies why do you think it's this close? >> yeah. i think it's more than clothes. of course, it's close. you just said it was close. >> very it's close to poland. i'm not convinced that it can be caused on election day outside if there's seven swing states deletion, most least likely scenario is it breaks for three it always gets and again, every race other than maybe 2008 has been close right up to election day and i if i could be wrong, but it's going to break. in one direction or the other. i really believed that in both these elections do that and i don't like to
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predict elections. i would just say just doesn't feel like a race that harris is going to lose, but that's just the feeling that's just to feel it as much as some democrats want this to be erased about a prosecutor versus a felon is in your opinion, james is it's still the economy stupid. >> i think it is. i think that she has brought opening because trump is saying you've got nothing to lose, everything is terrible and i don't think i think people do have something. i think people, most people who are working a job that people have jobs i don't know how to tell people this, but you 401k to the extent you have water probably doing a little better and i think he set up this dichotomy. you got nothing really you ought to try all of these tariffs and mass deportations which, you know, everybody says would have horrifically negative impact on economic growth. and i think that she's set up to say, you have something to lose, you
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have something to protecting, you may we can do better, but we certainly don't want to go back. and i think she's got a giant opening. i hope she takes it i really do hi, that trump's sets her up to say a lot of things. the problem is she says nothing unless she can serve salad dressing on it. she hasn't said a thing. >> i want to play a clip from the documentary that you just talked about. let's watch this genome is no, my travel god is are they both passionately love their country? >> they both passionate, love politics. they're both really expert in their students that game but they're on different sides. >> they have such a famous, i know it's like please say such a famous mixed marriage. she's had about republican, he's a reptile. >> and yet they've made it work over the years. >> i'm really a conservative. he's really illiberal history things in changing, in changing wife. i'm not changed sexual orientation and not changing the political parties. we don't go to the house. what we got here. okay?
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>> they have a deep love in a day perspective. there's no question. >> and the secret i believe, what do i know? >> but secret, i believe to their marriages? they don't talk about politics. >> what is it like living with you two with you, with probably be having a good stiff drink i have to go do right now. >> i'll let you go do that, mary. thank you. james carville. thank you. very bad i don't like to join them do you get sick of people asking you, what, how do you live together because there's a lot of folks who, who are have you know, these dynamics and their families and they find it hard you have a pretty good we talk politics lead to advise on this every week i was 40, he was 49 when we got married. that's not a conventional marriage. i got accidentally pregnant if 42 that's not conventional. so who are we to say? and also, why don't want to think like him and he doesn't want to think like me if two people think the same, then they have a redundancy in their marriage.
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there's nothing redundant in this liaison that we have, you know, since the dawn of time how will you been married for 30, calling it a little like it's still like okay. >> anderson, that's what keeps the merits healthy. if i can think of it as a liaison, which i can honestly at world, since the dawn of time have tried to explain romance and they're still trying to explain it. said i did it. we're going to be able to explain it and what boot we're probably not going to happen if shakespeare couldn't do it, then you know, who else can do rock, how can we do it just before we go? >> what do you think the next 43 days are like? in terms of the craziness like destroy entire cycle. things have happened that we couldn't imagine that. how many times
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did we start today, star of thought, you started news night. who could have thought this is going to happen? something tells me something delft's is going to happen. i don't know what it is, but the idea we got 42 days to go six weeks. this is a sprint to the finish. i think there's there's another plot twist come in here. i just not good enough to tell you what i gotta just as bernie sanders on this program and it's in the film called you a hack. you own that you can did that. i think it was you don't see it, look, russia actually the thing i said, oh, my god, how could it get to jesus? all you so he calls you a and then you went to matt on prison, biden saying you think it was time for to go do you ever worry about the stuff you say? >> i would i would be up at night. it would be up nights,
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sweating after if i said something in a public, die for 30 32 years now, i have never had to say if i said something that offended someone, i want you to truly know that i never meant to say controversial stuff. sometimes i'll say things intentionally to vote a conversation. but i've never had to come back and say, if i offended sub wide authority, sometimes i offend people but actually intended to offend people. that's a different thank you for letting me be part of your liaison for you're going to present a big part of our life we're glad to yeah. thank you. thank you very much. thank you again, the new film is called carville winning is everything's do put it airs saturday, october 5th at 7:00 p.m. eastern right here on cnn coming up, we're going to talk about the close race in georgia was someone who knows the terrain very well. >> stacey abrams, former legislator, narrowly lost the 2018 gubernatorial election. there she joins us to talk about the final weeks of the campaign and what impact the state's controversial
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the call on underdog close captioning brought to you by guilt visit gilt.com today for up to 70% off designer brands has the designers that get your heart racing had inside a prices new every day, hurry. there'll be gone in a flash designer sales to 70% or so of gilt.com today tomorrow, the former president appears in georgia and sources say he also plans to attend this weekend's biggest college football matchup. >> georgia, alabama. this comes is the new york times siena college poll shows a close race in georgia among likely voters, he leads by three points, 47 to 44%. the lead is within the margin of error, meaning no clear leader. tension surrounded the election could be felt today during a public meeting of the georgia election board, two members of the republican controlled board defended their controversial new rule for acquiring election officials to hand count the number of ballots cast on election day. a lot of election officials, republicans and democrats say it could inject chaos into a tabulator letting the results on the day when republicans said of the lone democrat on the board, you are
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creating a conspiracy based off an assumption joined now by stacey abrams, former state legislator and democratic gubernatorial candidate in georgia. she also the author of a new children's book or third, stacy speaks up which goes on sale tomorrow does this new polling concern you in georgia? >> not at all in georgia is a purple state, meaning this is a competitive state. and the lead is going to swap back and forth depending on how you model the voters the winner will be the one who takes the time to cultivate voters to turn those voters out. and two explain how their lives will be made better. and that is what kamala harris is doing every time she comes to georgia and what unfortunately, i think for republicans donald trump has been very woefully poor at doing because he spent so much time arguing about his past and whining about what's happening now that he has no real plan for their futures the obviously it was very close with biden that you helped a lot getting people, getting out the vote. >> there. are you doing the same kind of work now?
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>> we are, but what i think it's always important to remember about georgia was that is a ten year plan, but it was a community effort. so you've got organization patients across the state that are doing work that or touching those communities that have been left out in years past there activating communities that need to know that their voices should be heard and that are talking about the issues that are so incredibly important. issues like housing issues, like student debt and so across the state, we have activated it, community groups activated organizations that have been hard at work for quite some time. and we're going to keep working until we get kamala harris elected. >> we've been reporting to this georgia elections board i think a lot of people, their eyes kind of glaze over things like this, but this is important because this idea of kind of an insider threat, the idea of actually having officials to are fully on just trump's supporters and are there to throw a wrench in as much as they can. >> i think what we saw in 2020 and what we need to understand it, voter suppression has three
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things. can you register and stay on the roles? can you cast a ballot and district valley get counted? this is not one single issue. this is one of the issues they have put in place because of the horrific bills that were signed by governor kemp, sb to o2 in 2021, sp1 89 this year they've put a series of obstacles to counting those ballots in place, including mass voter challenges that are happening regardless of the party. it is a terrible thing to do because like 25,000 or something in georgia, i think just i think it's actually up to about 45,000 so we know that when you challenge a voters right, to participate, especially for voters who show up every four years you scare them out of participation. you put it, you have a chilling effect. well at mass voter challenge is being layered by the rule they passed a few weeks ago, which is the one that allows election workers to decertify election workers allows a member of county election board to decertify or refuse to certify an election so you have chaos
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fruit election workers around who gets to vote, then chaos around whether the election gets certified. and now you have to do a hand or a hand count of the ballots, none of the actual answers, but just the number of ballots. well, in gwinnett, fulton into cap county or three largest counties, you're talking about 400,500 hundred 1,000, 350,000 plus and you only t three people per precinct to do this count. that's a state of 11 million people, four-and-a-half million votes if not more that's chaos in the system. and it's intentional. >> it's designed to undermine confidence, to create chaos, and to put election workers in a position where they cannot, in good conscience, get to the result, which is to tell the people of georgia what we decided. >> i want to ask you about your new children's book. stacy speaks up. it's what a young girl who uses her voice to make a difference in her school what's why, why this is your
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third book? i mean, what's it like writing a children's book? >> it's it's so much fun so the stacy stories, which is what i didn't use the name, but my mother gave me the name. but the stacy stories have really tracked issues and lessons i want young people to understand and with stacy speaks up. she's grappling with the issue of school hunger up to a child hunger unfortunately, in the state of georgia, one in every five children of experiences hunger, we have one of the highest poverty rates among children and unfortunately, our governor has refused to accept summer ebt, except money to fund school lunches during the summer this book preceded that decision, but for me it's emblematic of how important it is for us to understand the issue of child hunger. >> but also empathy and advocacy. >> i want young people to know that even if they see something is unfair they have the ability to intercede. she stands up for her friend's a young kid who can't get lunch, and instead of just bemoaning the fact that
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it happened, she works to try to make a change. she speaks up and when you do when we find our voices, good things can happen abrams. >> thank you so much. >> thank you, anderson. look forward to reading the book to my kids stacy speaks the new children's book is out tomorrow, coming up the deadliest day was israeli strikes in lebanon since the war in 20 you six more strikes may be coming. >> our jeremy diamond has the latest from the region moments that took culture over the edge. >> people are watching and then our world change it had an explosive reverberation tv on the edge sunday at nine on cnn meet the jennifer's gen x gen y, and gen-z. each planning their future for the mobile app gen x is planning a summer in portugal with some help from jpmorgan wealth plan. that's got whiskers. and why is working with the banker budget for her birthday? >> you only turned 30 months?
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says were husband well, i assets and israeli military officials say the operation is not over. jeremy diamond has the latest battering southern and eastern lebanon house, but it is the most intense israeli bombardment of lebanon since the 2006 war the deadliest hundreds were killed and many more injured as the israeli military said, it targeted hezbollah weapons depots and rocket launchers meanwhile, israeli air defenses springing into action as hezbollah fired more than 200 rockets and drones at israel, targeting the city of haifa and aning further south than usual at least two rockets hitting the west bank, more than 60 miles south of the lebanese border and just east of tel aviv as israeli fighter jets carried out some 1,300 airstrikes today, the country's leaders say they are deliberately escalating, hoping
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to change the equation. >> we've talked to sean, a promise to change the security balance, the balance of power this is exactly what we're doing, we're dismantling thousands of rockets and missiles aimed that israeli cities and citizens had lebanese officials say, this is simply israeli aggression in the continuing israeli aggression on lebanon is a war of extermination in every sense of the word the destructive plan aimed at destroying lebanese villages and towns and eliminating green areas in lebanon, israel knew escalatory strategy is pushing thousands to flee their homes as the israeli military sent mass text messages, including to some residents of the lebanese capital and interrupted radio broadcasts urging residents in southern and eastern in lebanon to evacuate in lebanon's bekaa valley is warning is focused on the villagers in the beqaa valley residents were given
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just two hours notice before israeli jets began hitting targets including homes or the israeli military says hezbollah is storing rockets and weapons as smoke engulfed swaths of lebanon, many now fear this is just the beginning. as the prospect of all out war now looms larger than ever. >> jeremy diamond joins us now from haifa. so what more is the idf saying about the strikes well, anderson, the israeli military says that they hit a rocket launch facilities as well as weapons depots holding rockets, drones, long-range cruise missiles. >> and you can see in many of the videos of these strikes but there were indeed many secondary explosions indicating that the israeli military was hitting some of its targets. at least they are also claiming tonight that those secondary explosions caused some of the junta hundreds of casualties that we have seen across lebanon tonight. now, we have no way of knowing how many of
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the casualties could potentially be tied to those secondary explosions. what is clear though anderson, is that today the israeli military took this conflict to a new and very deadly level of the israeli military clearly trying to escalate this conflict to try and get hezbollah to back down from its rocket attacks on northern israel. >> anderson diamond, be careful. thank you i'll still ahead. >> what the unfounded claims about haitians in springfield, ohio are doing to that community or gary tuchman spoke with some haitian children and their parents next morning with kasie hunt tomorrow at five eastern when it comes to amgen, life changing medical break first, every second and counts. but without investment, those breakthroughs, or often past city seamlessly connected banking markets and services businesses deliver global financial solutions. >> so our client can keep investing in innovations for
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told him. >> this part changed my life superman crazy to start simple little thing over the world that is tough because i can feel him, but he can't feel it needed to do something for everyone else in the same condition
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dana reeve paralysis act. >> people are literally walking because of him super man the christopher reeve story in theaters. >> yet tickets now it pg 13 moments ago, the former president wadi and again on springfield, ohio, as you know, he's repeatedly smeared the city's haitian community saying falsely that they're taking and eating people's cats and dogs tonight, he accused vice president harris and he says illegally flooding american community communities with half-a-million in migrants. >> then he said this they will never be the same. >> they will never be. >> do you think springfield will ever be the same? >> i don't think the fact is and i'll say it now you have to get him how loud you have to get them out. i'm sorry that prompted some of the crowd started chanting, send them back over the weekend, or gary tuchman went to sunday services in springfield to talk with haitian haitian american families evangelical church of
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springfield, ohio was less than a year old the sunday services vibrant a reflection of the haitian community that is regarded springfield is a great place to live at the same time in another room children ranging from toddlers to teams gathered to pray and play with a youth pastor who encourages the young people to talk about a tough subject. oh, you feel about what happened? and springfield about what they say about immigrants and the common sentiment. >> these three words how you feel about alicia is 10-years-old. she's in sixth grade. she was born in the united states. >> her father is jeannine. he moved to the u.s. after the devastating 2010 haiti earthquake they are both upset at what's been said. >> it made me feel a little bit sad a little bit of angry in springfield. >> they're eating the dogs, the people that came in, they're eating the cats.
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they're eating they're eating the pets of the people that live there last enough. >> springfield, there is no basis for what the former president said. and it's very upsetting and humiliating too many of the children here close haitians can here for a better life so i think they have to stay strong and don't let the things that that trump says get to them just this strong job would is 13-years-old in eighth grade. he was born in the west but moved back to haiti before his first birthday with his mom, baby they came back to america about four years ago would says he likes living in springfield. >> and how does that make you feel that there are people who don't want you to stay in the country and a little bit tell me about that doing nothing. >> we just came here just a little bit of life. >> but now with bomb threats against the city of springfield, many are
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frightened what's mother? >> are you scared father. do you feel safe for your family in this community absolutely not. >> nobody knows what's going to happen. leader would is a confident young man. he wants to own a car dealership in the future and he wants to protect his mom in the present. >> how long stay at home. so not a lot of people can come up to us make front of us a lot comments as an eating cats and dogs a youth pastor at the church has some within the community have told her they are looking to get out. >> there living swing fee because they feel unsecure the scare alicia and her family are staying put. >> but the ten-year-old who wants to be a doctor when she grows up, did listen carefully when her father told us he's concerned about his family's safety how does that feel hearing your dad say you save somehow matter what happens
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gary joins us now, i'm so sad to see those kids kind of feeling the impact of these comments anderson and they're just shouldering and every one of the children i talked to at the church service, want to stay in springfield. they liked there friend. they'd like their schools. they like the routines. and among the older kids, i talk with a teenagers who follow the news. they also like the fact that the mayor of the city and the governor of this state are supportive gary tuchman, thanks so much. >> the news continues. the source with kaitlan collins starts now see tomorrow source tonight, donald trump rallying this evening in pennsylvania, tearing into vice president harris, insisting it's too late for another debate while criticizing the early vote holding that his own party is pushing plus i have new reporting for you on mark robinson tonight. >> the embattled republican candidate for north carolina