tv CNN News Central CNN September 30, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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old separate the two and it's a shame because two of the top issues for voters really inert to the benefit of donald trump. that's immigration. and the economy. >> if he could stick on those issues. i have no doubt he would win, but he can't he's talking too much about issues that in to the benefit of harris, like abortion women's reproductive rights. he's doing that in a way that does not appeal to these moderate voters, certainly doesn't appeal to the suburban women that he lost. so he's he's getting it wrong. we'll see if the issues are big enough to win out and block out the rhetoric. but i'm just telling you what we're hearing from swing state voters. the very voters inside this, and look, polling is showing she's closing the gap on in terms of where they are turn the economy, but immigration still, there is a lot of strength there too. yes, we will see vp debate. yeah rarely carries a lot of weight. i don't know guests entering it could be the last debate of the entire cycle. do think this one is different.
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>> it's an inflection point and because of the truncated nature of this election and just how wild this election has been they need an inflection point. everyone kind of needs another chance, another bite at the apple before november 5. so i actually think there's going to be a lot of tune i think whatever happens tomorrow night could change some minds, but yes, typically a vice presidential debate doesn't do much about an election. we will see what typical you know, think about this as normal and neither are neither other we did that make says he new hour cnn news central starts now begin with breaking news, breaking moments ago sources tell cnn that israeli special forces have carried out raids in inside lebanon in recent days as fears grow of an all
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out regional war in the middle east in comprehensible damage, hundreds of communities cut off far from freshwater and much needed supplies. >> as rescue teams race to get to those stranded residents. we now have new numbers as the death toll continues to rise. and hear from residents of one devastated town and two astronauts, lebanon, stuck on the international space station for months. but this morning there, ride home as finally we arrived, i'm sort of saga john berman and kate bolduan, this is cnn news central in the breaking news, as sara just mentioned, cnn has learned of cross border commando raids by israel into lebanon, into the southern part of the country. these raids back-and-forth could be a sign that a larger ground invasion could be coming. obviously, there have been airstrikes on beirut for days now, let's get
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right to cnn, chief national security analyst and anchor jim sciutto. who is in tel aviv. jim, these raids what do they show and what do they tell us yeah. well, john, you could call the shaping operations smaller special forces raids as well as just the barrage of airstrikes that we've seen and over the last several days, not just taking out his bold leadership, but going after firing positions missile launch, shut sites, missile and rocket storage sites in southern lebanon would all be part of laying the groundwork for a broader ground incursion or small scale invasion, whatever language you use so one can say that those operations have already begun and keep in mind what the israeli goal here is, as stated publicly, we're not guessing about this israel's goal as officials have described, is to move hezbollah back from the border and to do that they that
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they seem to be making it clear. they don't just intend to do damage to hezbollah forces along the border, but pushed them back. the typical dividing line is the litani river, about ten miles back from the border. so that when you have the israeli defense minister go speak to israeli forces. now massing on the northern border and use this phrase, we will employ all the capabilities at our disposal that's quite clear. public signaling about what may very well be the next step. and i think you could see these special operations raids as well as the bombing and the strikes we've seen in recent days as part of that same ground operation jim, what is now known about hezbollah as it is currently constituted, their will and ability to carry out retaliation i think to some degree in recent days and weeks, if you go back for instance, to the
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pager attack as well as the killing on friday of nasrallah we've seen something of a piercing of the bubble of hezbollah's military capabilities as advertised, this was because iran strongest proxy weapon in the middle east and against israel, its strongest piece of that ring of fire around israel. we talked to great length about the many tens of thousands of missiles and rockets, et cetera. but now it just a few days time, israel has not only dismantled its leadership right up to the very top but it's taking out, taken out a lot of those very missiles which raises questions as to whether even if a decision were made by hezbollah to carry out a sizable retaliation, who would make that decision? and how would they communicate that to field commanders to then carry it out? it's not clear that they have the capability to do that. i don't mean to underestimate hezbollah's remaining arsenal or the threat. but the blow that israel has struck in recent days really raises
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questions as to what they're capable of and we should also keep in mind iran's public comments, which has been to say, we're leaving this to hezbollah to retaliate. were effectively sitting this one out, not to minimize or ron's own capabilities, but at least from the public messaging standpoint they seem to be keeping their powder dry as well it is something that absolutely bears watching is hezbollah on its heels as much as it seems, at least from everything we see and hear jim sciutto, it's great to have you there as our eyes and ears. >> thank you so much, sara. >> all right. this morning, the u.s is preparing its military as fears grow that iran may be planning touri attacks. cnn's arlette saenz, that the white house with more on how the biden administration is viewing all of this at the moment and there meeting at this very moment, what are you learning or lot? >> well sara president biden is hoping to prevent this situation from escalating into a wider regional conflicts that could engulf the region. that is something that the
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administration has feared and really tried to work to prevent a for the past year. now, a us official tells cnn that one major area of concern right now is the possibility that iran could be planning an attack in the wake of israel's killing of hamas leader hassan nasrallah just last friday. so the u.s. is working with israel on its defenses. this us official said, hoping that a joint defense and a change in the u.s. military posture in the region could potentially ward off a potential she'll attack. now, this official did not outline what an iranian attack would look like or specify the exact moves that the u.s. could take. but the pentagon in a statement on sunday, did stress that if iran tries to already, if its partners are proxies, tries to use this moment to target either american personnel so now or american interests that the u.s. would respond to defend the american
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people at the pentagon has noted that they have a significant buildings in the region, including a carrier strike groups, and they are also working to increase chris the readiness of us troops who could mobilize to the region. now, president biden, on saturday convened a meeting of his national security team along with vice president kamala harris to assess the situation in the middle east. and also talk about the readiness of us military forces. and just yesterday, he stressed to reporters that he believes an all-out war must be avoided. take a listen war in. >> the middle east be avoided really have to have already taken precautions relative to our embassies first, you know, we want to leave but we're not there yet, but we're working like hell with the french and many others there is a reference to the us hope that there could be some type of diplomatic solution to try to return israeli and
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lebanese civilians back to their homes. president biden also said he does plan to speak with israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu soon, though officials have not detailed how soon that conversation might happen. but biden making very clear there that he wants to take whatever steps possible to try to ensure that this war does not spill out into a wider regional conflict. that way been goals, the whole region arlette saens. >> thank you so much for your reporting there from the white house kate, with us now to talk much more about all of this as a former idf spokesperson, retired lieutenant colonel jonathan conricus. thank you so much for coming in. it's good to see you. this new reporting that is really special forces have been carrying out targeted raids into southern lebanon, gathering intelligence ahead of a possible ground incursion from your experience, if this is happening, do you think a ground incursion is inevitable? >> well nothing is inevitable. first of all, good morning to you and thanks for having me.
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nothing is inevitable at this stage talks would they be successful. and the french and the americans would get hezbollah to agree to implement security council resolution 1701 and move beyond the litani river, then no such ground operations would be necessary. israeli civilians would be able to move back to them holmes and i think here's what it would be very happy to avail itself to other threads that it has against its national security unfinished business in gaza and elsewhere. so no, this is definitely something that can be avoided. but as the trajectory is now, it looks as if nobody has really making it something that can be avoidable. and israel as a sovereign country, has a responsibility to vote its people, to allow them to go home safely. i think the operations and what you refer to the information is part of making that happen and taking the necessary preparations in
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order to bring their civilians home. >> president biden said yesterday that there the way he put it was that there has to be a way to avoid a broader war the trajectory that you, that you were just mentioning, do you think it is realistic to think the region will avoid a broader war? >> so one thing that i think is given any, it is a must is that israeli civilians must be able to go home to their homes safely without being threatened by says hezbollah cross-border attacks or anti-tank missiles being fired at their homes, which they have been for the last 11.5 months. so that's the end situation that israel needs to achieve. how do we get there? do we get there by a ceasefire agreement or by military action? that's very much up to hezbollah. and their iranian masters. >> they could understand the situation and they could understand that israel is very serious about getting its people home but at the end of the day, i don't think that
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iranian masters are going to allow that to happen. >> and i think that they're going to push in lebanon over the abyss. i think that they are going to tell hezbollah that there's no option but to push forward and to escalate this into war is an israeli would hope you see a different situation where it's not necessary and israelis can go back to their homes without having israeli ground troops in lebanon. but eventually somehow i think you're alone, jonathan, i think you were hearing some of the natural sounds, some of the sound from some of the video we're showing, which can be confusing sometimes. oh, let me sorry about that. let me ask you this. because at the same time when you add all of it up, that you were just describing? you also had israel bombing houthi targets in yemen sunday why why do that? now is, you know, you'd ask a good question because when you asked why now and not nine or ten or
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11 months ago, that's that's a fair question. and because the houthis have been firing missiles, ballistic missiles at israel for about 10.5 11 months and only now, now is the second time that israel retaliated insignificant force against the 40s. the first time was about a month and a half, two months ago when israel struck the port of hudaydah and a few military facilities in the vicinity yesterday, is well delivered. a stronger blow against a more diverse target. it targets in yemen that are related to the houthis. and the point here is to send a message to the houthis that if you continue firing missiles at israel endangering our civilians, then there is a price to pay and please start firing. it is all it's a very simple thing where we're there also so much that is not even nothing close to being simple when it comes to the region and where things are going right now. who putin for lieutenant colonel jonathan
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conricus. >> it's good to have you. thank you so much for coming on. >> john all right. this morning, new pictures of just the extraordinary devastation in north carolina from hurricane helene in places now, just being reached for the first time, i still can't get over some of the images we're seeing from there. and we are just getting word the death toll is rising new details this morning of the beth, it acting being used to prepare j.d vance and tim walz for their debate tomorrow night and new this morning, the new york times just came out with an endorsement for president they called vice president harris, the only patriotic option years. >> i've been saying publicly what people say and their himself i have enough money. i could just shut off and back i can't carve saturday. >> it's seven on cnn have to alert suppliers, coordinate shipments ready alerted already coordinated.
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>> breaking news. i'm getting a sandwich. >> we need to talk about what constitutes breaking news there via got news for you saturday at nine on cnn and streaming next day on max all right. >> just in the death toll from hurricane helene is rising 102 people have now been confirmed dead, and that number will almost certainly rise. it is already the third deadliest hurricane to hit the united states in the last 50 years. the storm left a trail of destruction, at least six states in north carolina, the governor just told kate that the storm and wiped entire towns off the map cnn's melissa gonzalez is in asheville, north carolina, which has seen so many problems where we know this morning >> yeah, the devastation is very, very much here in asheville, north carolina take a look right behind us. the rainfall has subsided, but we're now beginning to understand the damage that are left behind this is just one of the hundreds of roads that have been closing that remained close this morning. and you can see why look at the heavy heavy
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sludge, the mud on the streets, making them impassable. two people walking by and also to cars. we saw some of them slipping and sliding, creating very dangerous conditions now, right now this morning, as the sun has come up, we've seen people, groups of people going into the he's businesses were actually surrounded by a lot of small businesses. they're going into assess the damage, but we know that most of them are completely destroyed. we're told that this may not just take weeks, but years for people to rebuild people going back to the places where they work, saying they may not have a job to go back to so the impacts are definitely long lasting and all the while people are dealing with power outages, they don't have running water internet and cell service are also out. >> we differently spoke with some residents about what it's been like for the last few days here on the ground. >> take a listen. >> well, we don't have any power. we haven't had any since friday morning.
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>> we had water running water, but we can't drink it and now the pressure is so low that there's no water coming out anymore really undescribable. >> i don't know. it just was covered and a litter and trees and mud and it's stinky and it was all the way up the street appeared it just looks like the bottom of a river that over the weekend, there were around 600 reports and counting of missing persons, people calling the county to say, i haven't been able to get in touch with my love dwyane the good news is the authorities are saying keep calm he pulling onto hope because as those cell phone in thosservices are restored hopefully they will be able to communicate and reach out to their loved ones. >> another thing that we're dealing with here, john, power outages in north carolina alone over four 450,000 customers
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have been impacted by these power outages. and we still do not know when they can expect to have the lights back on yeah, it's not a matter of lines being knocked down. it's a matter of lines been completely swept away. there may just be no power lines in some places. memorable gonzalez in asheville. thank you so much for being there. please keep us posted. sara. all right. we are finally getting a look at some of the greatest damage left by hurricane helene. look at this before and after of the beautiful little village of chimney were okay just up the road from their our next guest woke up early friday to the sound of boulder smashing into the bridge outside their house. and then they watched as that bridge completely washed away, their neighbors homes washed away and somehow miraculously they were able to escape tyler covarrubias and lizzy brewer took that video that you are looking at right now with those raging waters, they are joining us now, live and safe from
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south carolina. first off, how are you two doing this morning we're doing all right. >> we're getting better it's been really difficult and it's, it's kind of, hard to put into words, but ptsd has kicking in i'm so sorry to hear that. and this is going to be a long road. we are looking at the roads and how many of them have been washed away? hundreds have been washed away. how did you to manage to get out with i understand you're to chetty he's moment thing we that couple dillman larson that came across the bridge they had a cat as well. >> they got they got inside our house and we sat there for a little bit and before we knew it was dire that we needed to get out and we had gotten the cat bags ready and that's all we were worried about at the moment is saving our animals
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and we were looking around at things and that's when i really realized that none of what we own matters right now and our lives, their lives are cats, lives that's all we have. >> lizie i'm curious, described that we're looking at some of the video that you all took. and this is some of the photo lizie that you took. i just mud everywhere where it usually would be like a front yard describe what you saw as you left your community leaving. it was just unrecognizable when we were going around just looking to see if anybody was okay. i drive those roads all the time and i just couldn't even i couldn't even picture where we were anymore and just knowing that nobody is ever going to be able to live there, probably most of the people who have built their lives there aren't going to be able to finish their lives. >> there and it's just really
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horrifying. it's sad because there's still people there that are really hard to ever really worried about all the people that are still there. and that's why we want to do this, is so that hopefully this can reach the right people to really go in help. >> because it is if people a lot of people that still live, there can't physically get out and it is hard for any emergency personnel to get in. >> we just want to be able bring this to the attention so those people that are still there, can get help because they needed so back may need it so bad they're gonna have to rebuild our whole entire lives, everything lindsey, i heard you say something that is just devastating for anyone who is live in such a beautiful place. >> it's your home you don't think that you will be able to rebuild rate where you were.
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can you just tell me why that is? where where are you just the terrain in general driving on it when before all this, walking on any of it, it's intense, it's not an easy route. >> i mean, there's curves, the roads martin angry shape to begin with and now that they're completely destroyed, there's no way in or out via car barely human. i've been helicopters only had a few spots. just a few maybe only two or three, where they can safely actually land and for most people to be able to get to those thoughts, it's physically impossible so tyler, you said that ptsd has kicking in and i know this is an area where people come, for example, a chimney rock, because it's so cute, it's so beautiful. >> there's only about 140 actual residents there. what does what are you going through now and what help do you think
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you and others will need? as this goes on and on and on, trying to figure out where you go next through my mind the past day, pretty much but we're definitely any therapy from this our brains. we've physically feel it, how traumatic it was and i feel, you know, fuzzy. it's hard to think of words to say and put thoughts together and it was traumatic. and i think we're going to be affected by this for a long time, if not, the rest of our lives we don't know where we go from here. >> we don't know where everybody else goes here. we don't know. you don't know? >> we're looking at just as more of the video that you took and you all were helicoptered out of their and you're seeing that this sort of beauty of north carolina and the devastation all at once. i just want to thank you both for taking the time this morning because i know rehashing and
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going over it again can be really, really, really hard but thank you for talking us through it and also for reminding people there are people that are still there, they are trapped, they are stuck. they have very little help. they can get to them at this moment. but you know, the authorities say that they are trying and they will do everything they can to try. and save lives at this point. but this has been an extremely devastating storm to hit the area in which you live. thank you. thank you so much for coming on this morning. i know this was really hard >> thank you for having us take care of yourselves and if you want to help those who are impacted by this like lizzy and tyler visit cnn.com/impact or text storm to 707074, ways to donate okay. >> so much hurt there. >> the harris campaign are trying to go after donald trump and j.d. >> vance in a new play on debate eve in a 43 page report.
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no less, what it is all about and now impactful, it will be we will discuss the man charged with attempted seemed to assassinate donald trump is due in court this morning. you're live from outside the courthouse walz and j.d. vance in their first and only face-to-face debate and cnn has covered with the best political team a cnn special event that vice presidential debate tomorrow at nine on cnn. >> you know, if your cash back and you can earn on everything which is one car chase freedom and limited because all you're off the rocket or grabbed, fracking, your cash back? >> cash back home. glad that baby back for tacos at the taco shack. >> i'm working on my six pack switch to a king suite silent retreats. >> silent retreat year at cannes. >> all right, now madison and of cash back when everything you bob would chase freedom and limit that with no annual out a
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in motion this election is about two very different visions for our nation. one focused on the future and the other focused on the past, when the middle-class is strong, america is strong lowering the cost of living will be a difference signing goal of my presidency out lower the cost of insulin and prescription drugs for everyone. and i will work to pass the first ever federal well ban on price gouging on food. more than 100 million americans will get a tax cut. we will end america's housing shortage by building three million new homes and rentals. that are affordable for the middle class together, we will build an economy for everyone can compete and have a real chance to succeed now is the time to chart a new way forward?
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kamala harris down cnn's isaac dovere has this reporting. he's joining us now with much more on this so what more are you learning about? how i don't know how he's feeling ahead of tomorrow good morning, kate. >> what tim walz has going into tomorrow night is something that he hasn't done before. most people haven't done before a nationally televised debate. obviously, high stakes, it could be likely will be he the last big marquee event of the campaign. and walz is looking at this saying, he wants to make sure he is making the case for kamala harris as strong as he can, even though he obviously didn't know kamala harris himself very well before he got picked, but he wants to do that both for the sake of not letting her down, making sure that she feels continuing to feel that but she made the right choice in picking them and also because he is really committed to the idea that donald trump can't be president again. and that kamala harris should be president. so it's a lot riding on it. and the reporting that have on the site gets into all of that and the role that he has been playing in the campaign, both in front of the scenes, making people really feel attached to him and
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to her. and in the scenes, lining up some key endorsements for harris also talk to me about this multi-multi page report that the harris campaign has now put out there very clearly trying to target donald trump and j.d. >> vance on the issue of health care. what are they doing with it? >> so ever report out this morning? healthcare is regularly one of the places where all these big political and policy discussions that we have really hits the road for most americans. and what the harris campaign is doing ahead of this debate. very specifically is trying to highlight that comment that donald trump made in the debate that he had with kamala harris, where he was asked, does he have a plan to replace obamacare, the affordable and he said that he has concepts of a plan we are 14 years into the obamacare debate, nine years into donald trump running for president. he's supported
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repealing obamacare and he still does not have a plan for it. he made clear for what it would be instead, it's also beating up on j.d. vance for something that he has been talking about on the trail, which is a way of separating out people in different risk categories and how they'd be covered by insurance, different pools, all of that the harris campaign is saying is a way that would hurt americans and most importantly, the thing that they're highlighting is that it would likely scale back things like preexisting condition coverage, which is an overall one of the most popular places, are popular parts of obamacare yeah, a lot to happen ahead of this debate that's for sure. thank you so much. john. >> all right. with me now is senior spokesperson for the harris-walz campaign, ian sams. >> ian, thank you so much for being with us. the vice president, cutting short a trip out west that a rally in nevada last night was supposed to have more campaign events today. going back to washington to focus because on the hurricane, how was that decision made and what her plans exactly
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thanks for having me in the vice president's been briefed over the weekend consistently by the fema director and the team on the white house side about this horrible devastation that we're seeing across the south. >> i grew up in east tennessee right across the mountain from asheville, north carolina, seeing the flooding that's happening there where i'm from is heartbreaking to me and the vice president and the president are working hard to mobilize federal resources to the area to make sure that there are 3,300 federal personnel on the ground mobilized to help support this effort to get generators, food, water into the area she wants to come back back to washington to get a briefing from fema today to be updated on the latest of how that work is going on the ground. she spoke last night with governor cooper in north carolina and she's reached out to other governors across the south to see what they need. and she committed last night, as you heard from her at her event in las vegas that these communities will be left to rebuild alone. she's going to make sure that the president and she gets the resources into these communities as they are needed
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over the weekend. also, donald trump held a couple of rallies and there's often a debate on there are some critics of trump will play all the rally so people can see what he says and sounds like other say, don't give credence to what i just want to play a little bit of what he said about vice president harris, then ask you about the big picture. listen kamala is mentally impaired. she's incompetent. she's not a smart person. have you think about it only a mentally disabled person could have allowed this to happen to our country joe biden became mentally impaired said. >> but lying, kamala harris honestly, i believe she was born that way so how do you calculate whether and how to respond to something like this versus the focus that the campaign wants to be talking about this morning, which is health care listen to what donald trump said just there, you know what,
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you don't hear, you don't hear a word about what he's going to do to help the american people. >> you don't hear a word about real issues that actually matter to voters in this electrolyte health care today, we're talking about the fact that donald trump on the debate stage said, i have a concept of a plan. well, j.d. vance, who's about to be on the debate stage tomorrow night, came out and announced what that plan was and it was putting people with pre-existing conditions back into these high-risk pools that cost them more money and could actually eliminate their health care coverage. this is what they are proposing and donald trump saying what he says is intended to distract from the real issues that people actually care about and what we're not going to do is we're not going to let their secret plans to take health care away from millions of people, 4 million people in places like georgia and michigan, 5 million people in place like pennsylvania, who have pre-existing conditions, who their plan would put at risk of both higher costs and losing their coverage. that is what we are talking about in this race because vice president harris
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has a very different agenda. she wants she cast the tie-breaking vote to make sure that seniors had their insulin capped at $35 in the day, had $2,000 a year caps on their prescription drugs. she wants to expand that to all americans she's still focused every day on bringing down the price of health care for the american people. but donald trump and j.d. vance and j.d. vance has a chance to explain this on the stage tomorrow night. have a different plan which is to take health care away from millions of people, raise costs on people with preexisting conditions so you picked up the endorsement of the new york times overnight shock. i don't think that's actually shocking at all. but in this endorsement where they called vice president harris a patriotic pick, the times did actually criticize the vice president. it said that they would like to see her doing more unscripted events. they said, quote, it's a disservice to the american people and to our own record and leaving the public with a sense that she is being shielded from tough questions as mr. biden has been could backfire by undermining her core argument that a capable new generation stands ready to take the reins of power. your
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response president did a half-hour sit down interview on live tv last week. >> she's got an interview coming out, i think in about ten minutes on a highly, highly listen to podcasts called all the smoke, where she talks about her vision for the country unscripted about who she is and how she grew up and what her values are. so she's going to continue talking the american people in these sort of settings and formats she's taken questions from reporters on the campaign trail. she's going to continue to do that. you talk about the new york times endorsed now i'm more interested in yesterday we saw the endorsement of former very conservative republican senator jeff flake. from arizona, who said, she is the patriotic choice that, that he's putting a character over party, putting country over party to endorse her in this race. and i think that what you're seeing across this country is republicans independents, democrats, but republicans who are coming out and saying that she is the right choice in this election. she's very proud of the support that she's getting
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from republicans across the country, including senator flake yesterday, including general stanley mcchrystal yesterday saying that she's the right leader to take on the commander in chief mantle during these times of great challenges around the world, those are the endorsements that she's focused on. and of course, she's going to continue talking to the american people rallies and in interviews and in podcasts throughout the rest of this campaign. >> ian sams, thanks for coming in this morning. appreciate it sara all right. in just a few hours, the man accused of attempting to assassinate donald trump is due back in court as he faces new charges and spacex to the rescue, the capsule that will give two astronaut stranded in space for months, a ride home. next finally arrived take them. but when hundreds and car insurance, but liberty mutual
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>> you do before they start crafts. >> the lead with jake tapper to the id.4 on cnn morning, the man charged with trying to kill donald trump in florida is due back in court for his arraignment. prosecutors say ryan ruth stock, the former president in florida for more than a month month, he was captured shortly after the september 15 incident at trump's golf club in west palm beach? that's where we find our randi kaye this morning, she is outside federal court for us. randi, what can we expect to happen during this particular arraignment? >> good morning, sara. we do expect that 58-year-old bryan ruth, will enter a plea this morning and official plea at this arraignment through his attorney he's now facing five charges in this case, just last week, prosecutors charged him with attempted assassination of former president donald trump. that was in addition to the two gun charges he was already facing, those were possession of a firearm by a convicted felon and possession of a firearm with an obliterated
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serial number to other charges. now on top of all of that, include possessing a firearm from in furtherance of a crime of violence and assaulting a federal officer. so he will as i said, enter a plea today. also, it's worth noting that the judge in this case he is expected to be the federal judge overseeing the case will be judge aileen cannon. she won't be hearing court today, but for the future, she will be taking this case over and she's the same judge who was overseeing donald trump's south florida classified documents case until she threw that out last summer over the summer. but just in terms of the findings that the prosecutors say they happened in terms of evidence, they say that they have a letter that was turned over as part of turned over by a witness in this case who said that ryan routh had dropped this letter in a box at his home weeks ago and this letter reads in part dear world, this was an assassination attempt of donald trump but i am so sorry, i failed you prosecutors say that letter was written by ryan roof also. they did search ryan
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routes car. they say they found six cell phones there, including included on one of those phones was a google search that looked at how to get from palm beach county to mexico. sara, but let are going to be used as evidenced for certain this case goes all the way to trial. >> thank you so much. randi kaye, for those details. outside of the courthouse this morning, john. >> all right. we are standing by as president biden is set to deliver an update shortly on the rescue efforts underway as the death toll from hurricane helene is rising, and two astronauts still stranded in space for several more months, but they're ride home, just arrived. so there's that special event the place presidential debate tomorrow at nine dry, tired, he burning my dry eye symptoms got worse over time. >> my eye doctor explained the route was inflammation, seifert was made for that relief is lasting. >> so hydro treats the signs and symptoms of dry eye disease don't use of allergic desire dre, and seek medical help if
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needed. common side effects include iran station, discomfort, blurred vision, and unusual taste sensation. don't touch container tip your eye or any surface before using sandra remove contact lenses and wait 15 minutes before reinserted dry eye over and over it's time for zaida we all need fiber for our digestive health, but less than 10% of us get enough each day. >> good thing meta missile gummies are an easy way to get prebiotic plant-based fiber for the same amount of fiber as two cups of broccoli meta missile gummies. the easy way to get your daily fiber kate made progress with her mental health, but her medication caused unintentional movements in her face, hands, and feet called tardive dyskinesia or td so her doctor prescribed us dead oh, xr once-daily, extended least td treatment for adults significantly reduced kate's td movements. some people saw response as early as two weeks with costello xr, kate stay on her mental health beds oh, my buddy or sadow xr can cause depression, suicidal thoughts or actions in patients with
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in atlanta. this is cnn this morning, the space x spacecraft that will finally bring nasa astronauts, butch wilmore and suni williams home has arrived at the international space station. >> these two astronauts have been stranded in space after the boeing starliner that they arrived on had returned to earth without them due to a series of technical issues kristin fisher has much more on this has been falling. can we now call this a saga because that's what it kind of feels like you can call it a saga. sure. but you know, nasa is even reluctant to call this a rescue mission. they say that this is now just part of their crew rotation and but whatever you want to call it, kate, the vehicle that is now going to bring butch wilmore and suni williams back to earth. >> those two test as the two crew members that were part of the boeing starliner first crewed test flight they are now
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going to be going home on this spacex crew dragon capsule that arrived at the international space station on saturday. and you know, kate, this is a mission that was delayed by the hurricane it managed to squeeze out a launch in-between some big thunderstorms down at the kennedy space center, but it lifted off without a problem. and now, the only big difference with that flight, kate, was the fact that there were only two astronauts on board and nasa astronaut that commander nick hague and a russian cosmos tonight, there were two empty seats on that spacex crew dragon that launched on saturday and those empty seats or for butch wilmore and suni williams when they come back to earth. but kate, they are still going to have to wait quite some time until february of 2025. and i know you and some of our viewers are probably thinking, well, wait the spacecraft is there? why can't they just come back like, i know. i know. but the reality is these
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spaceflights are expensive and they don't have a ton of dragon capsules just lying around waiting to go back and you want to give that crew that just got up there crew-9 a chance to fulfill their mission that they've trained for a year-and-a-half for you, don't want to cut that short, so that all plays into it as to why butch and sunny are going to have to wait a few more months now so sounds like a plan. at least for now a saga, whatever you want to call it the all the all gone as planned. >> let's put it that way. kristen. thank you so much. butch and son, your leg, guys, if you could just do the experiment, the car is burned to the driveway, right? >> let's go alright thank you all, for joining us i am told that there is a mini-moon they're not going to talk about it now, going to talk about it ties has been cnn news, sexual. >> i'm john berman sara sidner newsroom >> take a look at when it's
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around here, aren't they were out of food? >> we're still in this thing things are changing i think that'd be through as possible you can't say the mall avoid digital threats, just turn on nord vpn your protection against strikers, malicious websites and malware couldn't downloads get the deal. >> now my little miracle is beckett, i where we are without st. jude. >> and in turn, we wouldn't be where we are without those people that have donated she worked her way up ahead of a
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summer job at mcdonald's. he was born there i'm very rich. >> she fights for you when our middle class is strong, america is strong he doesn't give me she has a reason for running. we are helping dig families out of debt by telling billionaires to pay their fair share. >> and so does he want to put me in jail? >> kamala harris for you, if it pac is responsible for the content of his sad, you know, if you are cash-back and you can earn on everything which is one car chase, freedom and limited it's all you're off the rocket or grabbed fracking. >> you can't back him cash back on flap jacks, baby back for tacos at the taco shack. >> i'm working on my six pack switch to a king sweet silent silent retreat year at cannes. all right. now, madison, have cash back when everything you, bob chase freedom and limited bob chase freedom and limited san francisco's been through tough times. london breed led us through the pandemic, declaring an emergency before anyone else,
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