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tv   Anderson Cooper 360  CNN  October 3, 2024 12:00am-1:00am PDT

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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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before the 2024 election, the judge unseal jack smith hundred and 65, page argument for why donald trump should still face charges from trying to overturn the law i asked one, we'll tell you what's new and whether or not his revised case might survive a supreme court can also tonight, john king all over the map on this young voters in michigan who has ties the middle later, gary tuchman, walking some of the worst hit parts of hurricane helene's path of destruction. >> were even almost a week later, the only way in by air or on foot good evening. thanks for joining us. we begin with breaking news in the case of conservative supreme court majority put on hold, if not on ice, late today. judge tanya chutkin unsealed. special counsel, jack smith's argument for reviving the election interference case against donald trump now smith has reframed the charges in a way he hopes will now conform to the supreme court's ruling on presidential immunity. and was stan what will all but certainly be more scrutiny from the nine justices. the brief filed under seal last week is
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heavily redacted, but still reveals plenty of new evidence that smith intends to use some of it apparently confirming the worst about the former president's reaction been learning his vice president and his family had been forced flee a mob of trump supporters bent on hanging him. that's pence in his security detail and his family fleeing right now. quoting from the filing upon receiving a phone call, alerting him that pence had taken had been taken to a secure your location person 15 rushed the dining room to inform the defendant and hopes that the defendant would take action to ensure pence's safety instead, after person 15 delivered the news, the defendant looked at him and said only so what the filing also focuses on the trump tweet, which arguably put pence in such jeopardy in the first place. and argued extensively for why it should be considered an unofficial act, therefore, not immune from prosecution. that tweet, you'll remember said pence quote, didn't have the courage to do what should have been done. so those are two highlights joining us now with more cnn chief legal affairs correspondent paula
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reid. what more are we learning from this new filing? >> well, i understand in this new filing, we're really seeing the complete picture of how the special counsel believes it could convince a jury that trump's efforts to subvert the 2020 election were private actions that he was acting as an office seeker, not an office holder. and this is key because in july the supreme court ruled trump cannot be prosecuted for official actions. and then this filing prosecutors write quote, at its core, the defendant's scheme was a private one. he extensively used private actors and his campaign infrastructure to attempt to overturn the election results and operated in a private capacity as a candidate for office. now this filing also includes some never before for seen evidence. prosecutors argue that things like like conversations with vice president mike pence or then chief-of-staff, mark meadows, could all be used in their case, anderson, it's not clear that's going to work because the supreme court also said official actions cannot be used as evidence in why is this coming out? now? >> well, this was up to the judge, tanya chutkan that was her discretion to release this
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enormous filing from the special counsel special counsel, short time ago, seven weeks ago, they submitted this approximately 200 page arguments laying out what they believe their case looks like after the supreme court's immunity ruling at what they believe their case looks like. like after the supreme court's immunity ruling and its judge chutkan's job to look at the supreme court ruling, look at the case, and determine what survives. but it was her choice to make this public again, just over a month before the election. >> and how is the trump campaign responding? >> well, of course they're not happy and they are pivoting to the political former president trump calling this quote a hit job. and they're trying to tie it to the campaign and even to last night's debate in a statement from the campaign, they're saying, quote, the release of this falsehood-ridde n unconstitutional january 6 brief immediately falling to moses disaster harris debate performance is another obvious attempt by the harris biden regime to undermine american democracy and interfere in this
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election. so i'll repeat, even though this was the special counsel's argument, it was the judge's decision to release this, and i also want to note the supreme court really had a big role in delaying possible trial here because they waited from december of last year all the way to july to weigh in on this immunity issue, making it impossible for special counsel smith to bring this case to trial. and this this filing, it's really the last opportunity voters will have likely to see the evidence in this case if the former president is reelected, this case will be dismissed. even if he's not it will proceed, but it's unclear anderson what lies ahead for this prosecution. >> all right. paul reid, thank you. before in prison has been posting about this online, including this warrant accusing the justice department of violating its own guidelines. and i'm quoting from him now for 60 days prior to an election, the department of injustice is supposed to do absolutely nothing that would taint or interfere with the case case. they disobeyed their own rule in favor of complete and total election interference he goes on, i did nothing wrong. they did the case is a scam, just like all the others, including the documents case
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which was dismissed. that's not all just moments ago he posted this. i didn't rig the 2020 election. they did joining us now, two former federal prosecutors bestselling author jeffrey toobin, cnn anchor laura coates, also with us former fbi deputy director andrew mccabe and retired federal judge, nancy gertner, jeff what do you make of the details that jack smith has laid out? and do you think they'll survive trump's claims of immunity? >> this is an incredibly difficult task for judge chutkan because these categories worries official and unofficial, are very difficult to define in the supreme court didn't really come up. >> they were very clearly on the line of unofficial trump's meetings with his campaign staff, with his campaign lawyers. >> i think meetings with his campaign staff with his campaign lawyers i think that certainly will count as unofficial, the toughest thing for jack smith and the most difficult question for judge chutkan is, what about the conversations with mike pence because smith argues that pence
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was operating either as a campaign worker essentially working with trump on the campaign or as president of the senate as in the legislative branch, in his oversight role on january 6 those are tough arguments for jack smith to make, but the evidence from from pence is very damaging to trump so smith is going to try very hard to get that stuff in law. >> the special counsel says that trump quote, explicitly excluded a white house attorney in favor of private counsel and one of the meetings in which the president allegedly tried to convince pans to reject the electoral votes. the filing reads and i'm quoting it is hard to imagine stronger evidence that conduct is private, that when the president excludes his white house counsel and only wishes to have his private counsel present. what kind of pushback do you think trump's legal team might offer on that point well, whatever pushed back they offer is going to pale in comparison to the role of what white house counsel is white house counsel
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is not the private attorney of donald trump or any particular president. >> it's for the office of the president you see they're concerned with what's happening in the current administration, like what would be the conversations presidential privileges, and the like, things that would go to the very heart and core mission of the office. if you exclude that particular person and say, i want my personal attorney instead, you really undermine your ability in the future to say personal attorney instead you really undermine your ability in the future to say no, no, no. i was asking because i'm the president of the united states yet and still the likely say will counsel was counsel and perhaps donald trump was not essentially knowledgeable about the distinction he had an attorney present that's what he was trying to do and could been later go back to white house counsel, what we see in this fight i like though, does not suggest that they will be able to have a successful argument. this comes down to one very basic thing jeff is right, that it's vague, but either you were acting as somebody in pursuit of an office or you were in office holder, if you were an office holder, you have
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to abide by the parameters of the office and you cannot have these fall again, detours into person still behavior, andrew, i mean, you see the complaints from trump's and the doj is violating its own rules about not making public statements about an investigation too close to an election. obviously, trump didn't care about that when james comey inform congress and negatively became public, that the fbi was reopening the clinton email investigation days before the 2016 election, you were part of the clinton investigative team. i'm wondering what you make of the former president's argument tonight. >> i don't find it particularly persuasive as you as you might guess, a couple of reasons. one, this is a doj rule, it's a policy and it's certainly one that can be waived by the attorney general anytime he thinks it's necessary to do that or in the interests of justice and the second big piece here anderson is that policy is specifically directed at the investigators, the fbi the u.s attorney's, the line attorneys who are working with agents on individual cases. and it's a caution to not take any overt public
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actions, things that would be seen in the run-up to doing election. we are long past that point in this case, these are not decisions of the department of justice. these are decisions of the court. and is not something that the department of justice can control. so it's really not a matter that comes within the scope of that policy whatsoever. >> judge gertner, i'm the special counsel is arguing trump's interactions with pence and should be allowed as evidenced because the constitution specifically excludes executive branch from the certification of electoral votes and according to the filing, the former president unquote sought to encroach on powers specifically assigned by the constitution to other branches to advance his own self-interest and perpetuate himself in power contrary to the will of the people. do you think that argument will hold up in court? i mean, the then president tweeting about mike pence while mike pence in danger was was that not an
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official act of the president? >> well, first jeff because i think the pence accusations here, the pence data i think is new and that's the difference between what we saw it with respect to the january 6 committee. and now so what jack smith is trying to do is show that pence was not pence and trump were not acting in any official capacity because there was no official capacity beyond certifying a ministerial, just counting the votes and nothing more. i also want to follow up with laura coates said, which i think is very telling, which is that in many of the conversations with pants, it was not just and not excluding the white house counsel, but it was also campaign workers were in many of these conversations. it was clear then or it should be clear to a jury that what pence was again, acting as an office holder as office seeker rather than office holder pence
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smith's goes into great detail about how the constitution expressly limits the sitting president and the sitting vice president's role in the electoral counting process. so that someone can't continue their authority beyond the time that they're term runs out. so both the constitutional line as well as an evidentiary line and evidenced line here that would pence was doing this conversations with trump were not official. they were campaign discussions. >> jeff, a big part of the special counsel's argument is that a law called the jeff, a big part of the special account i'm sure the argument is that a law called the hatch act allowed trump's white house staff to basically wear two hats, essentially separating their political advocacy from their official duties. the special counsel claims and i'm quoting when the president acting as a candidate engaged in campaign-related activities with these officials during their presence, he too was not
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engaging in official presidential conduct well, the hatch act is a law that says, you know, high level government employees can't do politics. >> they have to do their job. and so what jack smith is trying to do is say that's the line between official and unofficial. it's an understandable effort because these vague categories, at least the hatch act, gives give some form to that those distinctions the problem with that argument is that the president himself is not covered under the hatch act. the president is allowed to do both his official duties and of course to campaign. so i think it helps him somewhat to try to draw this line. but since the main character in the drama is not covered by the hatch act, it's not it's not quite as helpful as he wants the filing references contemporaneous notes that vice president pence
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at the time during a wrote during a meeting with the former president when lawyer john eastman was asked to explain, depends why he should reject the electoral college votes. >> how important would those contemporaneous notes being a trial well, we've almost always gone back to what the jim comey contemporaneous notes, things was. >> right. and that was because kentucky and radius notes actually buttress the credibility of a person who actually wrote them. why it's close in time to when their memory would have been freshest, they would not have essentially time to concoct a story or change it and it lends itself to feeling more truthful. that's great in front of a jury or whoever is the trier of fact that that the judge in this case solely because it's so see you then i'm not trying to go back and shift in narrative or have revisionist history, the contemporaneous notes written close in time are very important. it also shows you that there was a manipulation that they're arguing was trying to happen there. they were trying to look at him, not as somebody who was any executive role, but his legislative administerial capacity and that could bode very well for the prosecution this suggests that they were
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trying to lean on him as a running mate, as a candidate not in his role as the vice president andrew, i prosecutors have said that they have a witness who's going to testify that the former president said to the first lady, melania trump and ivanka trump and jared kushner, quote, it doesn't matter if you won or lost the election, you still have to fight like hell is a statement like that? >> i mean, does that evidence is admissible how persuasive it would be to a jury if in fact we ever get in front of one is the bigger question that i have this on the on the one hand, this stage statement purportedly shows the former president acknowledging that he doesn't actually care about the actual results of the election. >> the only thing that matters to him is fighting to keep the job. and that's certainly consistent with the entire theory of this prosecution. so it's good in that way. on the other hand, you could certainly see a competent defense
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attorney standing up and saying, this is a man speaking to his family, trying to tell them the value of standing up for your rights, standing up for what you believe in and fighting on when you think you're right. so i think it kind of it is powerful, but it could be softened under the right circumstances. >> and judge, what happened. i mean, if chutkan rules in favor of the special counsel on agrees the behavior in the filing is not some presidential immunity. what then i mean, i guess there'll be an appeal by trump's team. and what would that mean for any kind of a timetable? >> i just have to preface the what then question which is, you know, we're in new territory here. so who knows but clearly the supreme court is telling judge chutkan to thread the needle here and describe what's in the appropriate category in what is not what is in the non-immune category? growing? what is immune? i would imagine she will issue a decision. there will be an argument both sides will say what what they want to say. she would have to issue
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its decision saying this is in and this is out people have asked whether there would be an appeal. again, we're dealing with new issues. i have no doubt that the supreme court would i? want to say? sticking its nose in this no matter what and the timing of it at this point, doesn't really matter. but certainly not going to be a trial before the election. >> there's one very simple answer to at least one of these questions, which is if donald trump wins the election, this case is going away. >> yeah, so jeff toobin, thank you. laura coates, andrew mccabe, judge gardner. thank you. a reminder. you can watch laura coates live at 11:00 p.m. eastern tonight. coming up next the presidential race, which this filing just dropped into with little more than a month until election day, while the latest on the race and cnn's john king revisiting young michigan democrats who had misgivings about president biden over israel and gaza when he was in the race the question tonight, how is a new democratic ticket change their voting plans and ask questions like, what does a comedy show doing on cnn
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breaking news, the unsealing of jack smith's case in a word for his election interference case comes with the defendants still not accepting the bedrock factual foundation to underneath at all, namely, that the 2020 election was free and fair on trump still does not accept that. and when confronted about it on the debate stage last night, is running mate dodge the question he is still saying he didn't lose the election. i would just add to that. did he lose the 2020 election tim, i'm focused on the future. >> did kamala harris censor americans from speaking their mind and the wake of the 2020 the covid situation. that is that is a nonanswer center vance last night deflecting and here he is again today why didn't you answer the question last night during the debate about who won the 2020 presidential election? well, look, here's, here's, here's the simple reason. the media is obsessed with talking about the election of four years ago it's all the media, cnn chief
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national correspondent john king joins us from the magic wall as the 2020 trump senior campaign official, erinperrine. >> and former harris communications director and jamal simmons talking about donald trump and his involvement in it. i don't know if this is going to be the thing that moves them. i think that the negatives on trump are what they are. the question now is, are people ready to hand the reins over to the harris-walz? walz team. and i think that's why the vice president's spending so much time going to ever even knew she can find talking about what her plans are putting out an 85 page booklet it's helpful to have something like this out there so that people can maybe get a little refresher for those who are looking for it. but i think the deal gets closed when the harris-walz team closes the deal, john, i mean, how do you see it as much as trump is complaining tonight, is this going to help him fundraising are rallying the base. >> jamal makes a key point about the closest of the election is this where harris wants to spend her time? the question is how to voters process this. so this is the
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2020 map. i'll just go to 2024 republican primaries. let's look in the rearview mirror first. this has helped trump in the past asked nikki haley, asked ron desantis, remember when trump was indicted on fraud charges in new york or when some of these federal cases came down, the political reaction was, and even some of the republican reaction was this will hurt him. instead, we got this we got this. it helped him with the republican base. it helped him raise money and had helped a rally around trump movement because a lot of republican voters agreed with that thereafter, me, the deep state is out to get me, joe biden is orchestrating all of this. that's the rearview mirror. it helped him and it helped him enormously. here's the question. and jamal just made the key point so let's just use battleground pennsylvania, the most critical of the battle hello, ground states. will it help trump in all these red rural counties where his base is strong, most likely he'll probably raise some more small dollar donor donations and rally the here they come, and that is critical in a close race to turn out your base, anything that can motivate them attacks on immigrants, a attacks on the prosecutors, anything to motivate your base helps my
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question is, what about down here in the philadelphia suburbs where you've seen our pieces anderson, we have a number of nikki haley voters. that republicans by dna. some of them are thinking about voting for trump, but this stuff bothers them. there's not a ton of them, but it doesn't take a lot of people. so that's the question. >> erin. i mean, this smith filing, it comes a day after the exchange between vance and walz in the debate i want to play what wall said today about former vice president pence who was referenced many times in this new filing. let's play that was not on that stage with me. and let me just say this let me just say that i served with mike pence in congress we disagreed on most issues, but in congress and as a vice president, i never criticized mike pence's ethics and commitment to this country. he made the decision for the constitution mike pence did his duty he honored his old any chose the constitution over donald trump understand in that 88th minute last night with
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that nonanswer senator vance made it clear he will always make a different choice that mike pence made and as i said then and i will say now that should be absolutely disqualifying if you're asking to be the vice president united states i mean do you think aaron, that the trump campaign should be concerned about any kind of a renewed focus on the 2020 election aftermath. i don't think that they should be, and i think at both john and jamal hit the points that a lot of this is already baked into voters. they've already seen this information as of this point. i don't think it's going to move anybody in either their direction and i think that it could help bring out those smaller dollar donors, those who are going to give less than $200 to john's point during the primary, we saw big fundraising opportunities for donald trump with each indictment and polling bumps. now, his numbers are pretty solid and locked in at this point. but every little inch matters at this point in the election and one thing that tim walz did there that i will
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not be surprised if i see republicans seize on is when he was pushing jd vance on his fidelity, right? when he's talking about that, he would be loyal to trump. let's remember, jd vance served in the united states marine corps, has already promised his fidelity to this nation. this is kind of a treacherous track for tim walz especially given the back-and-forth we'd already seen between vance and walz regarding service to this nation. >> i think that's actually a good point, but it's a different i'd make a different conclusion. >> is that the american people actually do want a vice president and a staff that are going to stand up to the president and tell them when they're wrong and move it. >> that's why i think this is really about the future. right? so we know what happened on january 6. we know that people storm the capitol. we know that donald trump egged them on the question is, at this comes up again, how is it that we expect them to behave? and we are, we are vice president harris and your walz. what you want to do, governor walz, what you want to do is say, we're going to behave differently. were there in a holdup the country that it is that you want and the system
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that you weren't, that is the point they're trying to make about the future of the american democracy not about what happened the last time. >> john, i mean, you speak to voters in battleground states all the time. how much do trump's legal issues actually come up, resonate with them? immunity. it doesn't seem like a tie in the priority list among most voters know, but i just want to bring up georgia because we're in georgia recently for again, a piece on swing voters or persuadable voters in the georgia suburbs. and two of our voters did bring it up. i did not ask the question, are christine when runs a tea shop just out to cab county just outside of atlanta as she was undecided before because sinwar have over biden nor trump now she's for harris i asked one of the reasons why she said ethics. ethics. she didn't bring up the legal issue specifically. she said ethics then suresh schama's from from cobb county. he's a trademark independent voted for trump in 2016, voted for biden in 2020 he said he has a three-step test for picking a president, didn't have an answer after the first two steps the third step was is the president a role model? can i looked at my son and my daughter and say be
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proud of that person. he's going to vote for harris because of that. now, if there are tens of thousands of those that can swing a close state like georgia, settled by 11,000 votes. that's my question. you know, it fires up trump's base and you know, it also fires up the democratic base, the democrats who don't want trump will see this and say that's a reason to go knock on another door, sign up another voter, makes sure i cast my early ballot. the question is for that tiny slice of persuadable voters who might vote for trump because of the economy or immigration. but the ethics stuff bugs them. so that's something to watch. >> earned free need you jamal simmons. thank you. john king is going to stay with us coming up next. his all over the map series, john returned to michigan where young voters because there are telling him now about who they're going to vote for tell you about life insurance through the colonial penn program if your age 50 to 85 and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget remember the three ps what are the three ps >> the three ps of life insurance on a fixed budget our
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to learn more, go to lumi do.com close captioning brought to you by rula law, iconic brands up to 70% off retail at rula law.com, rubella you never faithful friend sees the deals on top before there shocked when that today. >> king's all over the map report tonight, , takes him bac to michigan where he revisits group young student voters that we've met before. they are passionate about the middle east. and when john last spoke with them, prison biden was on the ticket. now that vice president harris is, he went back to see what, if anything, has changed all on campus means
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football in ann arbor, that means go blue whatever your politics on campus also means election crunch time here, the push to vote and vote early is just about everywhere you look, you are not getting to the white house unless you get michigan and you're certainly not going to the white house unless you get gen z jade gray and anushka jalisatgi are former president's of the college democrats, jealous sake is now a first-year law student born in missouri, but this time voting in michigan, a lot of my out-of-state friends are switching their registration to michigan because they know it's a battleground state university art museum doubles as a voting hub outside this registration desk stands out as does this school day concert man for you and me that very spot on our last visit in may was home to a student encampment protesting israel's response to the hamas terrorist attack. and biden administration weapons shipments to israel university
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won't allow another encampment so it's harder to judge the depth of student anger. gray now works in digital organizing and sees a dramatic shift huge is an understatement. >> i think there's a drastic difference in support amongst young people for vice president harris versus president biden attendance had college democrats meetings is strong this night, spent phone banking really what the michigan democratic party, for a little pep talk from michigan's democratic governor october 7 anniversary is at hand. the election just a month away now, this is a meeting of the syrian students association at wayne state in detroit. how many are hesitant? having a hard time voting for harris? because of these policies that's just about everybody. >> trouble for harris is also easy to find in majority arab american dearborn wahbeh nuseibeh is palestinian a 26-year-old, wayne state student who voted for hillary clinton and joe biden i'm not
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voting for kamala harris, not in good conscience. i cannot vote for someone that uses my hard-earned tax dollars to kill my friends and families overseas nuseibeh plans to vote third party donald trump is a threat to our democracy and a threat to our society. the campus divide goes well beyond picking a president at both ann arbor and wayne state, anger at school officials for how protests have been handled. and among students a divide over how we got here yes, there were atrocities on october 7. >> but again, these people are fighting for their land and for there families to on october 7, they weren't fighting on their land. they crossed into israel yeah so even though
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didn't start on october 7 it really didn't. maya siegmann is a wayne state junior active in the campus hillel chapter just back from a summer in israel, the propaganda war, the social media war, the news war that hamas and israel are fighting. hamas is winning. it is hard because when people talk about being on the right side of history, and then they don't educate themselves enough to figure out which one is the right side. it's a bandwagon effect. >> siegmann will vote harris though she wishes the vice president would give more details. >> the debate was hard because she didn't directly answer most of the questions. and when the topic of the israel hamas war came up, there wasn't really a solid response as to how she would solve it. >> there are few signs of trump's report on either count his greenlight to israel isn't what most students want to hear if you get a perfect world wanted to recruit some of those disaffected democrats. he's not helping you no, probably not max scheske is a member of the michigan college republicans. he will vote for
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trump, but he is hardly a fan. >> either bit of a grifter you know, if you can kind of get him to say you believe anything, as long as he thinks that's where the votes lie. >> chesky says gop energy is up a bit as the election draws near, but that many students planning to vote trump just can't wait to move on. >> and we certainly do have kind our, you know trump is you know, trump is basically jesus wing and a wing of the club, but we also, we do actually have a very sizeable, you know, very critical of trump. >> there's no doubt harris is running strong here kamala harris, strong enough. it's the question, if she comes up short in michigan, i don't think it's because of young voters. >> i think it's probably because we waited too long to make a switch. i sure hope she doesn't come up short in michigan because i don't really want to be talking to people about how young people should have done more when i feel like we're doing a lot game time in a state, harris aides to keep blue
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vice president harris performing with young voters compared to how president biden did in 2020 some numbers anderson, to help with that question. i never want to just look at this choice for president. i want to stretch this out a little bit, excuse me for turning my back. this, is a recent new york times sienna poll that shows donald trump and the vice president tied tied among voters aides 18 to 29. joe biden carried that group by 24 points in 2020 in the exit polls from being on the ground. remember when you poll a smaller subgroup in a poll is a bigger margin of error. i can't quite believe it's a tie from being on the ground several times in michigan, but there's no question. the vice president is doing better than president biden was doing earlier this year, when a lot young voters didn't want him to be the candidate anymore. but she's not doing as well as he did back in 2020. there's no doubt about that. absolutely no doubt about it. let me get that to move out the way and here's one of the things about it. the disaffection over the israel hamas crisis, their anger at the administration about this among all michigan voters in that poll, 67% said they're almost certain to vote only 55% this younger group said that young people generally more
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activist, you're trying your first election, second election. in most cases, a little not sure. they're going to vote. that's part of this. and a lot of that comes from the israel-hamas conflict. >> and so they seem more divided than in the past. >> it's interesting, you got to college campuses. it's a great place to debate things we talk about things more open. this conflict has shut down a lot of those conversations you saw at the end of the piece, there most of them students at wayne state and a jewish student at wayne state maya says she's trying to get to know some of her muslim classmates better this time, because this semester, because it was so hard to have conversations on campus last semester. so you have active democrats who say, i'm mad about the war two i'm mad at the administration. why isn't there a ceasefire? why isn't there an arms embargo? but what about the climate? what about abortion? what about lgbtq issues? they sometimes reluctant to talk to the students who they know are most mad, most angry as some, including the arab and muslim students, because they just end up in a fight about this because some of those students say, i agree with you on all those issues. but i feel my tax dollars are funding in their
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view, funding a genocide. so conversations you would expect near the end of a campaign, you still sent some tension over doing it because students who want to reach consensus, instead, their experience on this issue has been, it's a divide. >> john king. thank you. coming up, we have breaking news more explosions in beirut and over tel aviv tonight as israel expands its war in lebanon and debates how it will respond to iran's missile attacks disease, you can reduce the risk of kidney failure with parsi because they are places you'd like to be for secret can cause serious side effects, including ketoacidosis that may be fatal, dehydration, urinary tract, or genital yeast infections and low blood sugar. >> a rare life-threatening bacterial infection in the skin of the perineum could occur, stopped taking for sika and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of disinfection and allergic reaction, or ketoacidosis
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ballistic missile attack by iran? president biden today said he'll speak with israeli prime minister relatively soon. he also says he doesn't support an attack on iran's nuclear facilities nic robertson is in tel aviv tonight lebanon, turning deadly for the idf on its second day the limited localized targeted raids as the idf characterizes them, triggering fierce resistance helicopters inside israel, picking up the casualties in nearby trauma hospital declaring a mass casualty event, the idf confirming eight dead and several others injured in attacks. >> hezbollah claims took place in three villages hours earlier, overlooking the area of at least one of the attacks, double that
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resident or hatan already worrying about the troops i think that it's very danger to down with to go to the live and on, because many, many trump's waiting for them, she refused to evacuate last year, was busy preparing the truth groups holiday dinner for rosh hashanah, the jewish new year and hopeful their rates would bring her respite from hezbollah attacks i feel more safe because now army inside the whole country, however entering a new era of uncertainty, following iran's ballistic missile attack tuesday allies blunting the impact intercepting the majority of the fast long-range high
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explosive ballistic missiles. >> gonna start iran made a big mistake tonight, and it will pay for it. we will stand by the rule established. whoever attacks us, we will attack them we've been basic targeted, a fully operational, including their long-range combat mission in airfield. >> the scale of israel's response likely determining the pace of escalation on other fronts continuing uninterrupted palestinian health officials claiming israeli strikes killed more than 90 palestinians and gaza wednesday, as a new operation against hamas, opened up in khan younis strike near damascus on claimed
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by israel but blamed on them by syrian state media airstrikes continuing deeper into lebanon to targets in beirut and beyond civilians in parts of the capital warned by the idf to evacuate their homes as the country's death toll passes, 1,300, un, 1 million people displaced in nic robertson joins us now, what have you seen in tel aviv tonight be intercepts of some kind of missile or drone out to see these were not the sort of intersects where you have multiple launches up into the sky where they're going really high this was sort of more straight out which makes us think it was probably a drone, but there were several of them, several launches of the intercept, several explosions were heard in the distance. some time apart, maybe a minute or two minutes between the
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definitely explosions. so very hard to say the ai the idf is saying that they intercepted a suspicious aerial vehicle out to see we heard fighter jets as well at one point out over the sea just here, and helicopters because as well now the idf says, this is correct. they don't normally sound alarms when the thread is out over the sea. but it's not often that we've seen drones coming in off the water onto tel aviv a houthi drone perhaps couple of months ago, did impact here coming in off the sea. so not clear precisely what was being targeted where it was coming from, who was it that was now targeting tel aviv nic robertson. >> thanks very much. be careful still to come tonight. friends taking care of friends and hurricane battering north carolina. our gary tuchman reports on the recovery efforts and the search for survivors still in the western part of the state next
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los angeles in this is cnn president biden visited both carolina as today inspecting the recovery efforts from hurricane helene, including taking this aerial tour in the interior part of south carolina. >> it's about an hour or so drive south of the asheville, north carolina. now, north carolina officials say that 26 people remain unaccounted for right now in asheville, the western part of the carolinas was particularly hard hit. vice president harris. meanwhile, was in augusta, georgia today surveying recovery efforts there's a, lot of work that's going to need to happen over the coming days, weeks, and months. and the coordination that we ha dedicated ourselves to will be long lasting to get families, to get residents, to get neighborhoods back up and running the white house says she is expected to travel north carolina in the coming days. the overall death toll from hurricane helene has risen to 189 people. it's now the second-deadliest hurricane
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in the past 50 years behind hurricane katrina, or gary tuchman is in the western part in north carolina tonight with more on the look on the hunt in the search for survivors you want to walk with a man who plans to deliver to five-gallon cans of gasoline and food due a friend who stormed damaged houses at the bottom of a north carolina gorge the only road in and out was largely destroyed in the storm emergency helicopter or by taking a vigorous and muddy three mile hike out about 1,000 feet up it will undoubtedly be a very long time before our vehicles are safely able to use this road again josh, how much farther you think we have? the man i'm walking with josh part or hasn't been able to get in touch with his friend brian is worried run into other civilians who have been hiking down in order to help survivors who are either stranded or don't want to leave we hello
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yeah. yeah. >> as we approach the bottom of the green river cove gorge, we run into fred rasic he was among many gorge residents who rode out the storm. >> the older people would infirmities have been airlifted out my place, total loss, but i'm sorry, i expected that i'm sorry about him, but i'm alive and my loved ones are alive and good folk. and so, so we got every by, i'm glad you're okay that night. >> god, you're okay. >> we arrive at the bottom after about 90 minutes of hiking houses, rvs, cars, trucks destroyed roads have disappeared into the green river, which is now so wide, it's unrecognizable. the resonance beautiful get back there. >> yeah, we're going to rebuild. >> i think the gorge, a helicopter starts flying directly towards us a board, the chopper are members of the south carolina
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helicopter aquatic rescue team to of the rescuers been repelled down to the ground to make sure people are okay? >> as of now, there have been no reports of deaths in the gorge or serious injuries. we see fred rudik again at his property he was in his home when the storm hit but found higher ground. >> this is where your house was before the storm? >> yes that's where my house was. the rock corner kitchen, right cross and muggy grass derby face and ride that is just to the left. that push mower. >> okay. and there's this huge tree house gop pivoting. >> what is turn arrived there against those three? >> florida's debris trap that so it didn't continue going down in around back into the river lightpost debris did hear his incredible it's incredible. >> i mean, it was epic. it's sad. i mean, pretty much lost everything. >> the house has been in fred's family for more than a half century. his late grandmother lived there i
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wholly intend to rebuild i feel a lot my sweet grandma, katie, would have expected me to do so. she got me hooked on these whitewater rivers and the lovely great outdoors. this was beyond my control. grandma katie you're doing this for your grandma, for yourself. this is your life. >> this is it is in my blood before hiking out of the gorge, josh parker finally gets to his friend, brian's house, only to defined he's not there we told bryan was airlifted out just hours earlier when his health became a concern. >> do you want to leave gasoline her anywhere for somebody? somebody can use it? >> brian's dog, maggie, wasn't taken on the chopper, but volunteers are about to take maggie on the long hike out of the muddy gorge can gary tuchman joins us now? >> i mean, it's so nice to see so many neighbors, friends helping each other. i mean, how long is it going to take until i mean, even getting road access to that community
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us, anderson was the only community in the state of north carolina that suffered storm damage the damage is so extensive that it's anybody's guess how long it will take there so much to rebuild. >> and the fact that there are so many communities, some big and some small that have suffered immense damage, just like that. so residence we talked to in the gorge tell us they are fully expecting that it will take years to come to some sort of normalcy. i will tell you lots of people, thousands of customers are still without power throughout the state of north carolina for 5.5 days now. but literally anderson, 20 minutes ago, the power came back on here in saluda, white above the grant, the gorge and people on this downtown street in the small town. all let out a big cheer got. >> so many people who need gary tuchman, thanks. so glad you're there at the news continues right here on cnn