tv Erin Burnett Out Front CNN October 2, 2024 11:00pm-12:00am PDT
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world, you have to retaliate. otherwise, you will bring more aggression to your people, to your country. but we will have to make it a calculated respond because we don't want to see full war with iran. and believe me, they also don't want to see it. we have shown our capability is when we felt hamas gaza, where we are fighting hezbollah in lebanon, liberal look what happened in beirut in gaza before the start of war with us yeah. >> and of course we're waiting to see what that israeli response is going to look like. you said ambassador, that it is going to be soon. obviously the world will be watching. i know it is the jewish new year coming up. thank you so much for joining us during, during the holidays, ambassador danny danon, thank you very much. thank you so much for joining us. the news continues right here on cnn aviv, breaking news, massive explosions, just heard in beirut as israel vows payback, an attack that could come at
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any moment and we did just see some explosions here over tel aviv. a president biden tonight warning israel, also breaking quote, make them riot. never-before-seen evidence against trump when he's campaign in the special counsel's election case, breaking this hour. and giuliani endorsing harris. rudy giuliani's daughter backing vice president harris. and tonight she has a dire warning about the former president she's my guest. let's go outfront >> i'm erin burnett. welcome to a special edition of outfront live from tel aviv, where there is breaking news at this hour as israel vows to retaliate against the largest scale attack ever from iran a response that could come at any moment. our crew in beirut witnessing a number of massive blast. so i'm gonna show you those new images of explosions lighting up the sky that's over beirut, those coming after israel said it was conducting a precise strike there, and our team here, we were just standing here and capturing two more blasts. near where we're
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standing. of course, we're on the coast of tel aviv explosions that perhaps could have been interceptions that look to be right over the water just north of here. and then also hearing those blasts and jet. so we're keeping an eye on that right now. is we are following this breaking news. it has been a day of fast moving developments. president biden drawing a supposed because it red line as concerns grow that the united states may be losing control of this growing war. tonight, biden in no uncertain terms, saying the united states would not back israeli strikes on iran, nuclear facilities >> the answer is no. >> they have a right to respond but they should respond proportionally >> i mean, he was very clear there, but let's also be clear on this. what we have all heard over these past hours is that a disproportionate strike by israel is a very possible based case scenario. and tonight biden is trying to put an end
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to israeli threats. like these think that there's a big, big opportunity here to perhaps do more regarding iran's nuclear program that the world has failed to do. this is a once in a 50 year opportunity. what israel needs to do immediately we need to take out iran's nuclear program former deputy secretary of state, wendy sherman. >> she told me that she believes will see a very quote, severe, and disproportionate response by israel. again, those crucial words i want to show you some of the sites that could be targets. because if israel strikes one or some number of these facilities, it would unleash a chain reaction of events that could be transformational and would endanger american assets and troops in the region as of tonight, there are some 40,000 us forces in the middle east raid and areas around where we
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are. and these details on the map where many of them are stationed, many of them, of course, are on ships at sea. they could be at risk, especially as iran is now vowing to hit back even harder. when israel retaliates saying quote, if israel wants to react, we will have a stronger response. this is what the islamic republic is committed to and here in tel aviv and with nic robertson, jim sciutto, who are here with me and just obviously seconds ago we were standing just off of where we're sitting now and watching what it appeared to be some sort of an interception, but almost over the water hard to ascertain where it was coming from it did seem to be going out over the water. >> these intercepts were going quite low. they weren't going high, which tends to indicate that they're not going to high incoming missiles. that's how the intercepts normally look when they're targeted missiles so it makes a crazy impression. it's a drone. the last group to fire a drone and get it to tel aviv with the houthis from this direction down here in yemen. but they fluid up the coast, an impacted just a few
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hundred meters from the the u.s. embassy, just down the coso us consular just down the coast from here. so were that were those houthi drones in does that tonight with heard fast jets out there now, heard the explosions, heard helicopters, a couple of minutes ago. >> yes, we did. and i mean, it all happened very quickly, right? jim, explosion after explosion than we did hear those imperative of fighter jets so as we're trying to figure out exactly what that is here, i mean, the tension is on a knife's edge. >> your question to be clear, different direction from last night, last night, giving iran is in this direction, that's what the missiles were coming from. that's where we saw that most of the intercepts up here, this one, the interceptors flew this way towards the, towards the west and then strikes king some target over the eastern med. and i think i counted four actually that time period. so it could be the houthis have it here at history of flying them up the coastline. it's also possible that they came from the north from lebanon, were of course, hezbollah is another possibility. we've asked the idf to get more details as to who exactly is firing them and what they think they shot down.
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>> and if it's for intercepts, that's for drones and that's a number we haven't seen here before either, right? >> if it really were four, so right. i mean, just and that's the situation that we're in. if you have that right now, we're trying to understand exactly what that is that we're in the midst of right now. nic also hamas staging the largest terror attack in israel since october 7. hamas, which is israel had said it had decimated the leadership of. are there operational capacity of the front line to the north where we just obviously not that far up where we saw those interceptions, but to the north of here is under incredible pressure as well as soldiers killed today, 47 injured. hezbollah saying that they're going face-to-face with idf troops are on the ground, walking into just over the border, into, into lebanon, trying to clear houses where hezbollah i believe to use as bases to fire into israel. but this is a massive bad blow for the idf, but a political blow for the prime minister. and also many ways, the hamas strike yesterday here, just down the coast here, will reflect badly on the prime minister's policies and the
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way that his handling the war france at the moment and at the moment is multiplying up those war for all of that, jim put incredible pressure on him to seize the moment, to seize the moment to do what he's going to do. and obviously the context here is we showed that map you're 40,000 us troops in this region at the ready. and all of that right now the u.s. >> president is making quite clear as us officials have made clear for months now, right? that the u.s. does not want a regional war and had eat instance of escalation. and to be clear, escalation, certainly by iran, by hezbollah, but also by israel, the u.s. has attempted it, attempted ceasefires. they've attempted to get back iran, back back israel rather to defend itself, but also say, don't go too far as we heard from the u.s. president today saying do not attack the nuclear facilities. and yet the war expands mean we've been talking for weeks and months about the danger of a regional war. this is already a multiple, multiple front war. the war continues in gaza. the
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war is expanding in lebanon with boots on the ground. the houthis israel struck the houthi is just a couple of days ago you were on that flight? israel, iran struck israel last night. this is a multifront regional war already going on moment by moment, right? i mean, we're awaiting an israeli response, but whatever we just saw moments ago, right? nic, we are in this moment is, you know, it's a kinetic situation biden has said he will not support prime minister netanyahu going ahead with the strike on iranian nuclear they're facilities. the question is, does that matter to prime minister netanyahu? >> it's very hard to predict, right now for all the pressures we're just explained, he really needs to show that his hazard deterrent capability. and this is an opportunity to strike as your guests were saying, and we guess have been saying over the past day or so, this is perhaps a moment of weakness where hezbollah, who can't strike hard at israel, there has held israel back before from striking deep into iran. this is a moment of opportunity. if you let this go now, it may not come back and
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the iranian nuclear threat is not one that goes away. and that's, and that's the level of pressure. and i think the pressure united states was able to put on prime minister benjamin netanyahu last april, not to go massive on his retaliation on its deterrence strike back then when iran struck here, that's, i don't think it's going to work the same this time well, here we are. >> i mean, do you have an even bigger response from iran? they're vowing bigger than they just did yesterday when israel does a foreign filing to double down on that and by the way, israel expanded this war while the u.s was pursuing this other ceasefire, right? so you've had multiple instances where the u.s. has expressed reservations and netanyahu's pushed forward all right. >> thank you very much, nick and jim, as we cover as we cover this situation and these developments here in the early hours of the morning with those explosions which appear to be interceptions, perhaps of drones as nic was saying, perhaps up to four, which would be new in what we just saw a few moments ago. let's go outfront now the democratic senator chris murphy of connecticut, he joined because we now he's member of the foreign relations committee.
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and senator murphy is i'm sitting here with nick and jim you know, and we have we're witnessing what we're seeing in a very fast-moving situation, where an israeli formal response could come at any moment, biden says to prime minister netanyahu, do not strike iran's nuclear facilities. its a hard no do you think that prime minister netanyahu will listen to president biden >> iran is israel's enemy. iran is our enemy these attacks are unconscionable and there must be a decisive response that's important for israel security, but that's important for the security of the u.s. as well. obviously, we have thousands of troops in the region. we've got thousands of americans inside israel, but we also know that iran has designed to continue its attacks on the united states and us assets. so there's no doubt that the united states is going to work with israel to deliver a response to these attacks. x. now, i agree with president biden. i do not
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believe that it is, frankly possible for a military attack on iran's nuclear facilities to eliminate their ability to produce nuclear material. the fact of the matter is we had a diplomatic agreement with iran that assured iran would not be able to obtain a nuclear weapon within 12 months of making no decision to move towards that objective today, they are perhaps weeks away. you can set them back, perhaps months, perhaps over a year, but you can't bomb knowledge out of existence. so there needs to be a response here. i just think it is a true statement that there's limited efficacy in trying to elicit lemon8 scientific knowledge, which is what iran possesses right now with respect to their nuclear program you know, we're in a moment where we sit here and there's been a surge of us troops into this region. >> you're in an incredibly fraught moment. you are now a multi-front war it is a war, it
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is bigger, it is it is here. it's not a matter of when that that's the reality of the situation that we're in and you've got 40,000 us troops arrayed around this region. what happens could impact them, could impact the united states. so how much control does the u.s. does president biden have over this situation right now? >> what was it? i an open question in part because prime minister netanyahu is pursuing multiple objectives all at once. i don't doubt that he cares about the security of israel, but he seems to be guided on many days by his own political survival. we obviously thought we had the ability to obtain a ceasefire with hamas. hamas stood in the way of that agreement, but prime minister netanyahu also seemed to believe that it would hurt his political interests to enter into that ceasefire and prisoner exchange. what has to happen now is first a response
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by israel the united states, but second we have to get on a path towards de-escalation. i don't think that these attacks on israel can go without a response. but there already was a diplomatic process in place with hezbollah. we have the opportunity after these limited ground incursions that israel is making to get us on a path to peace and perhaps by achieving a ceasefire in the north with hezbollah that might be able to stimulate further talks to achieve a ceasefire in gaza. >> do you worry though, senator, that do you worry though that that's wishful thinking. >> i mean there's de-escalation is not what we're seeing happened here i mean, that's just the reality of it. >> is that just wishful thinking? >> yeah. listen, i certainly worry that prime minister netanyahu is watching the american election as he makes decisions about his military campaigns in the north and in gaza i hope this is not true,
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but is certainly a possibility that the israeli government is not going to sign any diplomatic agreement prior to the american hurricane election as a means potentially to try to influence the result. i hope i'm wrong about that, but i don't think you have to be a hopeless cynic to read some of israel's actions as some of prime minister netanyahu's actions as connected to the american election well important words and heard loud and clear. >> senator chris murphy, thank you very much. we appreciate your time as we cover this breaking news. and we have more breaking news developing and that is never-before-seen evidence that trump's legal team did not want released, but we now i'll have it and it reveals trump's reaction to pence when he was in danger on that day on january 6, when a mob swarmed that stormed the capitol is life was a dangerous. what did trump do? well, that we now have the quote so what? and there's more
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plus rudy giuliani's daughter speaking out tonight outfront. she's tearing into trump for destroying her father's life, throwing her support behind harris. she's our guest and the death toll is growing tonight as president biden and vice president kamala harris visit north carolina, ravaged by hurricane helene. tonight in a cnn exclusive, will take you to the ground with the fema rescue workers ever done this james was famous for winning races, teams believes that change width it's the economy stupid i apologize into know want that man is it to fisted catcher? i am saying publicly what people are saying things out. i have enough money i can just shut up carbon. winning is everything stupid? >> saturday at seven on cnn. >> the fall holiday weekend is just around the corner. it's
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detailed filing by the special counsel, jack smith. it paints the fullest picture, yet of the evidence that ends the prosecutors have against trump. now, we learned a lot in this document and among the new allegations is that trump told his wife, melania, his daughter, ivanka, and son-in-law, jared kushner quote, it doesn't matter if you won or lost the election. you still have to fight like hell. evan perez is outfront and evan, lots of new revelations in this filing. i mean, even that that sentence alone says so much it doesn't matter if you want or lost. its whether you're going to fight to get the outcome that you want is very clearly what's being said there. what else is in here? >> well, erin, this hundred 65 page document is really the attempt by the special counsel to get over the very high hurdles that the supreme court put up to try to protect the former president. essentially shielding him from prosecution because of his immunity as president. i'll read you just a part of what the case that jack smith, the special the counsellors making, he says that when the defendant lost the 2020 presidential election,
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he resorted the crimes to try to stay in office and then he's they continue to say the defendant launched a series of increasingly desperate plans to overturn the legitimate election results in seven states and less those seven states. and among the things we learned. erin is the fact that, you prosecutors say they have evidence that donald trump himself sent that now infamous to 24 tweet, if you remember, on january 6, where he told his supporters that mike pence didn't have the courage to essentially go along with his claims that there was fraud in the election and essentially put the former the former vice president, then vice president in danger. what prosecutors lay out there, they say that they know there were only two people who could have sent that tweet and they know that the other person, obviously have witnesses that that person did not send a tweet, therefore, or it was donald trump who himself sent that tweet. and of course,
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as a result of that the former vice president was put in danger. they had to evacuate him. and in this document, we learned that one of the things that happens is the former president is sitting there for hours, are hearing about the evacuation at the u.s. capitol, and he's told that the vice president essentially is in danger and his response is so what again, part of what prosecutors are doing here, erin, is to try to get over this hurdle from the supreme court to prove they say that what donald trump did is not protected by immunity. erin i am pretty incredible. >> get to the get to the detail of the two people who could have tweet it and how you can prove that it wasn't one. so than therefore, it was the other. i mean, this is a level of detail that we simply have not seen before evan perez. thank you very much. so i want to go straight to the harvard constitutional law professor laurence tribe. that and professor you know, you hear evan going through what is, what's in this document
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incredibly detailed, 165 pages these are new details that we're getting from jack smith, what stands out the most to you? >> it stands out most clearly is the supreme court, despite its effort to protect the former president into a wreck hurdle that was almost sky high made clear that it is possible to overcome that hurdle by specific proof that the former president in his capacity as office seeker private capacity rather than office holder governmental capacity sought to overturn an election that he knew he had lost what we have here is a mountain of evidence, a mountain taller than the highest hurdle directed by the court, making it very clear that jack smith has the goods,
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he has the receipts the evidence is overwhelming and to the extent that there is any overlap between public and private it occurs in the very limited context of communications between the president and the vice president those communications, if they deal with the vice president's executive role, are within the sphere of immunity that can be overcome by proof that the evidence used would not endanger the presidency. but most of this does not even reach that area because most of it is communications with the vice president or about the vice president in his role as president of the senate, which is not subject to this executive immunity. now, i'm
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getting deeply into the weeds, but the point is that i cannot imagine a clearer case that meets the court's standard and all we have to do is wait until after the election if donald trump does not take the oath as president next january, this guarantees that he will go to trial if he does take the oath, it doesn't matter how good a job jack smith has done. because donald trump will either pardon himself or pick an attorney general who will dismiss the charges so this filing focuses our attention as it should be focused anyway on the forthcoming election the word. >> so what referring to the fact that at the time vice president's vice president's pence's life was in danger, that that was with donald trump said at that moment. i guess the question to you, professor,
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when you read through this and i know you say the mountain of evidence here is as high as it can possibly get your mount everest but could this case go to the supreme court again or do you view it as simply so black and white at this point that you know, you know, that it will get over the finish line it may well go to the supreme court again, but now, since it will go to the supreme court one way or another after the election rather than before. the clock will no longer be ticking, it will no longer matter that the court might drag it out the way it dragged out the original immunity case because the speedy trial right. we'll apply. >> they can't drag it out indefinitely. and there's no longer a looming election to worry about. that's the whole difference earlier, the supreme court was in a position to schedule a late argument to render a late decision, to make sure that sending it back to judge chutkan would create
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still further delay and that there would be no full trial before the november 5 election. >> that was imperative in the court did trump's bidding bidding by stretching it out as far as humanly could. now, that is behind us. and it no longer matters whether the trial occurs in april of next year or in october of next year, or even in perhaps 2026 this man is going to face justice unless he evades it by managing to get himself into the presidency. again, that's what it's all about. >> faster tribe, just one quick thing to you. is there anything that just sort of major dry your jaw drop when you read this? i mean, you know, you know so much of this, but this actually, you know, it put quotes on things, it put actual interactions, it put names on it in ways that we had not seen
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before. did that then after. everything you've seen and known, was there anything that you sort of said, wow, when you looked at it i said, well, about 25 times than a quick reading of this document. i bet there another 25 that i will encounter when i read it without the pressure of having to get ready to talk to you at 7:20 eastern time there are lots of jaw dropping things. you've named some of them, you know. so what if the vice president is hung it doesn't matter whether we won or lost that's just a sampling. >> it's the tip of a horribly large and scary iceberg tribe, i appreciate it so much. i'm so glad you did you did get through it and join me for this conversation. so thanks so much and we'll speak of course very soon. next, tim walz has a new strategy after last night's debate, and we've got some new reporting on that for you. let's rudy giuliani's daughter is my guest. she is
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now endorsing kamala harris blaming trump for destroying her father's life. she'll share it with you that the next day, our world change. murphy has baby, quayle has cao bones coming out episodes says to the world gets okay to be gay. >> george bush he's not care about black people i never thought something that i wrote would lead to a culture ward. you didn't shoot back like this and working tv on the edge, moments that shaped our culture. >> sunday at nine on cnn do you wonder and $73. >> this is how much you spend every month on subscriptions. >> i only have like two or three right? that's what we all think whenever reality, there's so much more that we don't even know where paying for so how do i put more of this cash back of my pocket, not get what he's a financial app that shows you every subscription you're paying for. even that when he forgot about from five years ago i can't believe i'm still paying for this i'll call it
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there's no interests, no credit shapes, no mandatory fees. i'm not waiting for payday anymore. and you should join me. i can.com and get paid when you say cell provider that was breached has my social from the credit check 75% of americans have had their social security numbers exposed you to recent data breaches that's why lifelock monitors millions of data points for identity theft crime inspector has five dapr voters. >> the most of any law firm in america. and maybe that's why the new york times calls climate specter of powerhouse law firm. so with wrongful conduct caused a catastrophic injury or death call klein inspector sounds like you need to vaporize that cold day, quote, vapor cool its dayquil plus a brush or v6 vapors vaporizing daytime coughing, aching stuff. >> he had power through date medicine. >> i still love to surf snowboard and of course skate. so i take kuno magnesium to support my muscle and bone
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everywhere, nando's, unlike anything you've ever tried before, get over 30% off at shop manno.com and this is cnn seizing on this debate moment from last night democratic leaders to say that donald trump is a unique threat to democracy when he peaceful over power, you still saying he didn't lose the election. i would just add that. did he lose the 2020 election tim, i'm focused on the future. that is a nonanswer
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his answer to the question about january 6 and a moment that the campaign considers to be what they want to be seen as the highlight of the vice presidential debate. >> outfront. now, priscilla alvarez, who covers the harris campaign, and priscilla, i know at this hour you've got some new reporting on wall shifting his strategy jie after last night's debate, he spent the day on some cleanup after what happened, but what are you learning well, this is a strategy that ultimately boils down to ramped up media appearances, because the reality erin, is that this is the final stretch of this campaign and allies to the campaign want to see more of walz on and the campaign trail, but also in media appearances because they believe that his likability is what resonates with voters now, more media appearances, beans, answering questions from reporters, and that was something that he did today during his bus tour in pennsylvania trying to clarify
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his previous comments about when or rather what he has said about the tiananmen square protests. >> take a listen he has the look, i have my dates wrong. >> i was in hong kong in china in 1989, august of 89 into hong kong, into china. i need to be clear, i will tell you that now of course this also came up over the course of the debate last night. >> so he's still doing some cleanup. there. but certainly an indication of what more will see from him on the campaign trail. and he has a lot of travel coming up. he heads to ohio as well as the wet as well as a west coast swing over the course of all of that, he's expected to make a late night tv w according to the campaign, as well as participate in what they're calling a high profile pop culture podcasts are they haven't said what these outlets are when they're happening, but certainly an indication of what would be getting from tim waltz over the next few weeks. again, as both he and the vice this president hit the trail in earnest, aaron
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priscilla, thank you so much for that new reporting. >> priscilla has new reporting comes said is giuliani endorses harris carolina rhose, giuliani, that is she is the daughter of rudy giuliani, who of course was former president donald trump's personal attorney and breaking publicly from her father now endorsing vice president kamala harris for president calling trump destructive calamitous and a dark force. all quotes from karoline rhose blaming trump for destroying her father's life. she writes in vanity fair and i quote from her, i've been grieving the loss of my dad to trump i cannot bear to lose our country to him to caroline rose giuliani is outfront now. she's a writer, a filmmaker, and obviously the daughter of the former new york city mayor rudy giuliani and carolina rhose. i know this is your first television interview since your endorsement, so i appreciate very much you're taking the time. i can only imagine how hard it is for you to have made that decision to do it publicly can you share what you went through? carolyn rose, what made you make this
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decision decision. i came to lightly figuring out how to articulate these feelings with the storm that i've been experiencing over the last couple of years, the emotional storm was really hard and also figuring out if i had the fortitude to share it knowing that it could definitely damage my relationship with my dad in the last years of his life was really really painful but at a certain point, earlier in this election, i think it all felt kind of surreal when donald trump became the candidate. it was like, i can't believe this is really happening after everything that he's done to our country after being the first president to not participate in the peaceful transfer of power like it didn't feel real and then i'm recently engaged. i'm thinking about having children. i very much want to have children. and one day i just thought about what i would say to my children in the future and in that moment, everything just became incredibly real. like i want to live in a country. if i have a
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little girl, i want her to have autonomy over her body. and if she becomes a boy, i want her to feel safe and respected in this country and no matter the gender of my children, i want them to live on a planet that's habitable and i would really also like them to live in a democracy. so it just the stakes all hit me at once and i knew i had to use every resource at my disposal to get this message out there. that we need to elect kamala harris if they went in for you for you, you have you have a voice and you had to decide whether to use it, but that's what's got to be so hard. i mean, i know i can only imagine how complicated your relationship with your father is. caroline rose, but as you say, it's the final years of his life, you love him. he is your father. have you talked to him about this endorsement is it's been anything where the two of you have been able to have a heart to heart or even a face-to-face conversation i didn't let him know. i was writing this specific article, but along the way, i've always made my
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opinions clear and he does know that i was raised to speak my truth so i don't think any of it we'll come as a surprise to him. i still worry that it will hurt him and i do hope he knows that i love him. i hope that was clear but yet we haven't spoken about it yet and probably won't for a while. >> you there's so many people whose families have been hurt and damaged and broken by what we've seen is it possible you for you, caroline rose to put words around how you can feel the way you feel and be speaking out, but also love someone so much >> i think, you know, people asked me a lot what happened to your dad and while i'm sure some people are looking for some kind of salacious answer. i really think the reason i get asked that so much is because my situation is so so relatable. it's a little bit on steroids and very public, but like i don't know anybody who
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hasn't lost a close friend or family member over there, over an allegiance to trump and politics have always been divisive from the beginning of time, there has been jokes about that first however, but this is different because if you are a woman, a trans person, or a gay person, a person of color, a person with disability. trump's actions and rhetoric threatened your very existence. so when someone you love supports them, it's really, really hard to reconcile i still believe that we should be trying to find the common humanity with those we disagree with, even in this time. but i also see that if trump becomes the president, that is going to become an impossible task for a lot of people. and the only way our families and our country can have healing is if we all good out there and vote for kamala harris and tim waltz, i really believe that you're, your father was of course, had many extraordinary moments as mayor of new york city he was a true leader.
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>> he was a hero in america after 911. you lived in gracie mansion, you were growing up there now what you've seen, i mean, just to go through this and it's not that you don't know this. i'm sorry. it's painful to listed off, but but this is what's happened. he's been disbarred in new york and washington facing election interference cases in georgia and arizona, filing for bankruptcy. owes the two election workers in georgia 148 millions of dollars he's being forced to sell your family home in new york city to pay a small amount of money for those debts blame trump for all of this? >> you know as i said in my article, i think everyone does need to be accountable for their own actions and i, there was some coverage of my article saying i'm blaming trump and i want to be clear that i do believe that everyone needs to be accountable for their own actions. but right now the biggest threat to our country
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is trump's. so i think it's important to look at the culture that he has created and the peep, the way in which he has refused to accept that he lost the 2020 election and get everybody to compromise their values. do anything just to keep him in power and attack citizens like ruby freeman and shaye moss like he's willing to hurt his own people just to have hour and kamala harris would never do that she is a she's fought for the people her whole career. we need to elect her freeman and shaye moss, the georgia election workers carolyn rose. >> do you fear your dad will ultimately go to prison? >> i. mean, of course that's a terrible thing to think about and i it is a fear and i'm i don't like to think about it. i tried to focus on the future
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and i know that we don't have a future as a country, at least not in any recognizable recognizable form. if we do not vote for kamala harris because trump has already made it very clear he's going to try to do the exact same thing in 2024. he is going to try to steal to say that he won this election no matter what the actual results so we need to get out there and vote so that it is indisputable >> what carolina rhose, i appreciate your time and i know it's got to be a very complicated and difficult decision for you to speak out. but thank you very much. i appreciate it. >> thank you for having me next the death toll growing in north carolina and dozens still missing after hurricane helene tore through the state in a cnn exclusive, you will see in just a moment, or isabel rosales takes you on the ground with fema rescue workers. you'll see what she witnessed. plus the breaking news, massive explosions rocking beirut. and we just saw flashes here,
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ourselves to will be long lasting businesses are still without power this many days after people are struggling to find food and water, this is six days after the storm, the united states and tonight cnn is on the ground with fema rescue workers are isabel rosales getting an exclusive look at what is left behind. >> you can see now her incredible report outfront guided up the blue ridge mountains by what a fema is 24 deployed urban search and rescue teams county, north carolina, just collapsed portions of beach mountain of remote ski resort town, left unrecognizable by helene's wrath sign it's just like washed off these winding mountain roads made further difficult to navigate by obstacles. we are entering an area that's closed off to regular people i think first
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responders are allowed. and it is because it's so treacherous, we're seeing it for ourselves like thick mud all over the place treason down portions of the road has crumbled down, so i'm really concentrating here. >> this is difficult to drive. >> and even when debris and fallen trees are cleared by chainsaw and manpower to make way for rescuers. >> another major barrier as fema supervisor of who's been on his cell phone trying to get in touch her ear as fema supervisor, who's been on his cell phone trying to get in touch with his team to figure out we're the rad division groups supervisor, colin burris pulls us over, can't get a signal we're seeing for ourselves everything that the governor has, the talking about. issues had been talking about the how big of a challenge communication is not just for civilians, but you guys tried to do these rescue operations at year is, you know, when
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email to all come the challenge in the towel slows things down then by pure luck, a few of his men spot us they found him just out of the blue. so this is great for being reunited here's a command post right here this at member fema team assisting the north carolina national guard. now on day six of rescuing survivors stranded and cut off from help trying to find live people trying to find human remains. they huddle over maps each about urgent search. how does this work? you guys are doing grids. i see this black, black line, right? >> yeah, it's just easier for us to keep up its wilson squad let's will say, you know, good grid won or good to go 34 before sunset, we roll out, we came up about three miles to waste before we can make it down, another danger getting through these torn and treacherous roads
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typically the roads washed out in a mountain atmosphere like this. hurricane's usually happen towards the coast but this is definitely more challenges for us. though. we haven't faced before, regardless, first its founders across the state push on more than 400 people rescued so far says the governor's office. but the work nowhere near done until all the missing are found. >> it's i understand. you just got an update about the situation in asheville, north carolina where you are i mean, after you have seen such devastation unprecedented devastation in north carolina where you are what are you learning? >> aaron nashville officials are trying to make contact with 26 people that are unaccounted for that number of days ago was 155 people and in buncombe county where asheville is situated, they once had a list of 300 to 400 people that they
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had to do welfare checks on. that number has dwindled down to four. so clearly amazing progress here in the last hour at biltmore village, police officers have actually opened up this business district, allowing people to walk they are in are seeing sites like this, like this semi-truck. look at this, the floodwaters, the raging floodwaters, bringing it over into mcdonald's parking lot in tipping it over into the train tracks buildings all around me, businesses have been completely gutted this this town is not ready for the season of tourism here erin let's just unbelievable and just to look at what's even behind you there, isabel. thank you so much. sure. incredible reporting continues on the scene there. next we do have more breaking news with a new strikes, adjust moments ago where we are and also in beirut city being mocked by massive explosions as this war continues to escalate, we will take you there live next
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you saturday at nine on cnn over israel tonight, as we told you, as we came to air, we witnessed several explosions here in tel aviv. we counted four of them right off the horizon where we are in tel aviv and the idf is now confirming that it did intercept an aerial target off the coast. just moments ago, there have been fresh, fresh blasts in beirut north of here
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explosions have been rocking lebanon tonight. massive ones, in fact, lighting up the sky and ben wedeman is outfront in beirut tonight and ben, you are able to witness these strikes taking place moments ago. what did you see speaking, i heard a thud behind me in beirut's southern suburbs but the most significant strike this evening was about an hour-and-a-half ago in an area which is not the southern verbs where hezbollah has a large presence. >> air and it was in the heart of beirut. in fact, just about 200 meters up the road from cnn's bureau here in beirut. and we understand that at least six it's people have been killed in that strike seven injured. this is an area to which many people who had fled other parts of beirut and other parts of lebanon had gone to thinking because its center of beirut that they might be safe.
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but apparently they were wrong and what we've seen in addition to that is a variety of strikes in almost there's only been one strike where the arabic spokesman for the israeli military put out a specific warning on his specific location, only one warning this evening, and we've had 678 strikes, perhaps where there has been no warning whatsoever and particularly that strike on the central part of beirut is a very credit how did working class neighborhood even before this war and jam packed with people? >> aaron >> ben wedeman, thank you very much. in beirut as we are watching the skyline here right now, as this situation continues. thank you so much for joining us. >> watching the skyline here right now, is this situation continues. thank you so much for joining us. ac360 begins right now
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