tv CNN Newsroom CNN October 6, 2024 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
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go behind the scenes of elon's trailblazing coming out. episode a new episode of cnn's tv on the edge, moments that shaped our culture premieres tonight at nine in you remember the entire audience being pulled out? yes. yeah. and they had to sweep it with dogs and whatever you had people calling you up and threatening. >> he also she had a stalker. i short with blond hair also, so i had the same stock. >> are well, people didn't understand stand and when people don't understand, they get scared. and when they get scared, they get angry and that's what we were getting a lot of >> everyone. thanks for joining me today. i'm omar jimenez, cnn newsroom continues with jessica dean right now
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i'm jessica dean in new york. >> we are following breaking news tonight as florida is bracing for another major hurricane hurricane, and we have new information about that intensifying storm hurricane milton. now forecast to become a category four. and is expected to make landfall later. for this week as a major hurricane, 51 counties across florida now under a state of emergency and mandatory evacuations have already been ordered in some areas. governor ron desantis is expected to hold a briefing just moments from now, we'll continue to monitor that. and of course, all of this is happening just ten days after many of these same communities were devastated by hurricane helene meteorologist elisa raffa is in the cnn extreme weather center tracking this storm for us and at least i know we're getting all this new information. what are you what are you seeing? >> jessica, i was literally just reading the latest update
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moments moments ago. the latest right now from the hurricane center's, we still have a category one hurricane on our hands, hurricane milton, the winds keep ticking up 85 mile per hour winds at this time yesterday, winds were just 40 or 45 miles per hour. so it has rapidly intensified in and he's very warm ocean waters. it is something that we keep talking about these this season with the ocean temperatures that have just been so warm, so sitting about 800 miles west and southwest of tampa bay here is the latest track. again, this is brand new that just came in from the hurricane center because these ocean temperatures are incredibly warm, we're looking at and rapidly intensify the defying again to that major hurricane status, the track now explicitly calls for a category four hurricane with 145 mile per hour winds, 145 mile per hour winds as a category four hurricane i'm sorry, it looks like my monitor just a trust, but i'll keep telling you there it is. let me just keep telling you about this forecast okay. category four, but i want to, i you, to look at something.
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notice that it becomes a category three at landfall, right so i want to walk you through this for a second. if we keep it on this track basically what the hurricane center is worried about is that the ocean temperatures are so warm that we're going to find this peak at a category four hurricane with those hundred and 45 mile per hour winds however, there is a front that sitting over florida that is which tracking milton into florida. that front has wind energy that will try to chip away at milton's intensity as it heads towards the west coast. so that's why you seeing it come back down to a category three right before landfall, the caveat with this is, as it's playing with at this intensity going up, coming down weekend, weakening a little bit. it could get fatter, could get wider. we have this problem with helene, right? that helene was so wide that the impacts for the wind and the rain and the surge just span for so many people. so it could be that problem too, while the intensity might come down just a little bit, it could also get a little bit
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wider, which means that those imparts can spread to farther points across the state. okay. so again, we're kind of splicing hairs here when we go for category three or category four, still a major hurricane, we're still looking at impacts of, devastating, potentially devastating, definitely life-threatening storm surge we're still looking at damaging wind impacts from this, and we are still looking at rain. okay. you don't need any of these wins to create rain, right? so the rain forecast is still live looking like it will be some five to eight inches of rain, even up to afford or so we're looking at we haven't had any watchers issued yet. we are expecting watches to be issued for florida possibly by tonight, hurricane and storm surge watches will be needed but we have not had those issued yet. they need to be issued within 48 hours were still outside of that because this was looking like a wednesday landfall. so something that we'll need to keep watching. but again
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category one hurricane right now, expected to rapidly intensify. again, jessica and likely hitting people who you just mentioned were hit not ten days ago with helene so rafah there in the weather center. thank you so much for that update it is now past midnight in israel, marking exactly one year since the hamas terror attacks on october 7. and moments ago, a fresh barrage of bombings, lighting up the sky there in beirut, as israeli forces target hezbollah ron's government saying more than 1,400 people have been killed, more than 1 million people displaced with so many bombings and military operations ongoing, fear easel, so rising that a full fledged war may break out across the region. we have cnn's jeremy diamond in tel aviv and ben wedeman in beirut ben, let's start first with you i know in the last couple of hours, even in the last hour, you have been seeing some of these explosions behind you that we've had about for airstrikes in the last, say,
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two hours, one of them very large in the southern suburbs. what we saw was after the strike itself, a variety of explosions in and things popping off into the air. so would appear that there were some sort of ordinance being stored in that particular site. now, what we've seen in the last 24 hours is certainly saturday into sunday overnight. there were many airstrikes, more than 30 according to the official news agency or new news agency here. and what we saw throughout the day was almost every hour a strike occurring in the southern suburbs to the point where i had got to get to a point where just the entire southern suburbs was covered in smoke from all the fires calls by those blasts there. now the arabic spokesman for the israeli military has put out on twitter or x a few warnings for
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four specific buildings in the southern suburbs of beirut. but oftentimes, those warnings don't come. i think it's about one in five. there's actually a warning otherwise, there's nothing and keep in mind that yes, it's midnight here in beirut at the moment oftentimes people aren't glued to their phones or their computers to watch these warnings come in on twitter. now we've been to the southern suburbs a variety of times. many people have left, but oftentimes it's the women, the children, the elderly that leave find shelter elsewhere. they usually leave behind a male relative just to keep an eye on the property. so there are still many people in that part of beirut's despite these areas they're strikes all right. >> ben wedeman there in beirut for us tonight, ben standby. i'm sure we'll be talking to you over the next couple of hours and i want to go now to jeremy diamond who was in tel aviv and jeremy where you are
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it is now 11 year since october 7 since hamas attacked israel. and today we are learning about a new israeli ground operation that's underway in northern gaza amid signs that hamas is regrouping, tell us more about this mean, one year later it is remarkable to think that not only is this war in gaza is still going on, but that these really military here he is carrying out yet another offensive in an area that over the course of the last year, its forces have entered three previous time because this is indeed the fourth time and that is israeli troops have now encircled and are preparing to enter the jabalya refugee camp in northern gaza after they say that hamas militants have begun to regroup and reconstitute in that area, posing of a threat. they say to israel, the israeli military overnight carrying out a series of air and artillery strikes of forcing hundreds of people to already begin to flee. that area where they have those people who were fleeing
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this morning expressing fears about whether or not they would actually truly find safety in this humanitarian zone, which has been struck multiple times before by the israeli military. and now the idf is also issuing evacuation orders for the majority of the territory of northern gaza potentially forcing hundreds of thousands thousands of people who are living there to flee their homes. but as you said, we are also now marking today october 7, one year later after hamas carried out this deadly attack that killed some 1,200 israelis. the majority of them civilians, and across israel in the morning hours today, we expect that there will be multiple commemoration ceremonies for the victims of october 7, but also of course, for the hostages near about 97 of whom are still believed to be held inside of gaza by hamas. some of them are dead, but many of them still very much alive. of course, the families of those hostages trying to emphasize the point today as they do every single
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day that their time is limited and that a deal needs to be struck in order to get them out. but a year in a year after that dark dark day, he israeli government still very much at war not only in gaza, but now also intensifying military in lebanon. and of course, there is also this threat of israeli retaliation directed at iran after that barrage of ballistic missile attacks. i spoke earlier today actually with the israeli defense minister yoav gallant, who told me that even though israel is consulting with united states, he is expected to travel to meet with the secretary of defense, lloyd austin later this week. he also made clear that israel will ultimately choose its own path as it retaliates against iran. and even as the u.s. has urged israel not to strike iranian nuclear facilities, the defense minister telling me that all options it's are still on the table jessica, right. >> jeremy diamond for us in tel aviv. thank you so much for that reporting let's talk more about what's unfolding in the middle east with two experts, cnn military analyst, retired
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army major general spider marks also with us, dana stroll, former deputy assistant secretary of defense for the middle east. good to have both of you here. thanks for being here thank you. >> jessica dana, i want to start with. >> yes, i want to start first with you. we just heard my colleague, jeremy diamond in about the israeli minister of defense, yoav golan meeting with lloyd austin making clear that israel will go on its own path, even as it consults with the us about what, what moves it will take moving forwards particular, particularly with whatever they decide to do to retaliate against iran. how do you see this playing out and how do you think the u.s. will maneuver in these really key moments over the next several days well, first of all, what's clear is that the defense consultations between the united states and israel are intensive and ongoing the head of us central command or military headquarters based in florida, flew out to israel,
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was on the ground over the last 24 hours. and now in the middle of what are clearly deep consultations within israel about when and how they respond to iran's ballistic missile attack. these really minister of defense is going to get on a plane and come here to meet with secretary austin at the pentagon the reality is that without us munition, supply and without the u.s. military posture increases in the middle east, supporting israel's defense. it would be very difficult for israel to consider more action and whatever the next round of retaliatory response would look like. and for the united states, we have more than 40,000 us forces deployed across the region an aircraft carrier. >> and we already know that iran on will target us forces just as they target israel. so there are implications for the united states and our security just as there are for israel general marks, what do you make of yoav golan coming coming to the u.s. >> to meet with lloyd austin
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pentagon i think it's an important decision on his part, and i think it really demonstrates the fact that there was very little daylight in terms of consultations as described between israel and the united states. >> that does not mean that israel is completely aligned in terms of what the biden administration wants to try to prevent them from doing and what their objectives might look like israel will make a decision and clearly because golan is on his way to the united states, i think it's fair to say that the israeli well, first of all, the israeli strike at any time, but i don't think they're in any hurry to do that. look, the center of gravity in terms of what the idf is trying to achieve is now against lebanese hezbollah not hamas and gaza that's a holding action that's a requirement that needs to be taken down but the focus of what the idf wants to take, wants to take on its hezbollah the response against iran is something that probably is already pre-baked and they're working around the
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edges in terms of increased intelligence, what the target list looks like, and where do nst the regime in tehran but i think it's fair to say the fact that he's in wrapped the united states doesn't necessarily mean that there's going to be a delay, but i think it's a pretty good assumption that there might be in terms of when the idf chooses to respond and dana as general marks, just, just alluded to it as we all know, the idf and israel now fighting multiple fronts here and we're, we're marking the one-year anniversary. very somber anniversary of these terrorist attacks on israel as someone who's an expert in that area, is this where you thought we would be one year later know, i certainly did not when it comes to hamas i definitely thought we'd made a different stage of the dismantlement of hamas, but what we've learned over the past year is that they're a terrorist organization who can
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adapt and merely being able to say that they survived a year of idf pressure is enough of a victory for a terrorist organization. >> and the other challenge with which the u.s. military learn the hard way is that without a political strategy on the other side of military creations, it's very hard to prevent the resurgence and reconstitution of a terrorist group who has entrenched across the civilian fabric of gaza. when it comes to lebanon the decapitation of hezbollah's senior leadership and taking out what is reportedly 50% of hezbollah those weapons arsenal across lebanon is also something that i don't think we were thinking about immediately after october 7 and 2023, it's really an astounding operational achievement. and yet israel is going to face the same challenge here, which is translating battlefield success into sustainable political outcomes across level and on that will provide that reassurance and security for israeli people, especially the
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70,000 israeli civilians from the north that would like to return to their homes. >> general marks we have to go just a moment, but i did want to just get your final thoughts on that topic as well. one year out here we were. what do you think? >> yeah, a political solution must be achieved. but in order to achieve that, i mean, our priority there was not any idea of what that political decision or what that political situation might look like so you've got to provide some type of an alternative, but our priority that you've got to be able to eliminate hamas and its capacity to wage tear. clearly they're incredibly incredibly resilient. but what we see is what we described as mowing the grass. we're going to kill as many israelis can kill as many of these hamas fighters that they can eliminate as much of hezbollah as they can but the root causes need to be addressed. and those root causes go through tehran. that's the bigger question. >> all right, general marks dana stroll. our thanks to both of you. we really appreciate it. >> next still ahead.
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>> 30 days to go into tonight. new cnn reporting about how the harris campaign plans to put some distance between her and president biden in the final month before this election and won't florida nervously tracks at hurricane milton, president biden is sending even more troops to north carolina mountains. there were hundreds remain missing or stranded, unable to communicate. you're in the cnn newsroom >> tv moments that took culture over the edge, people are watching and then our world change. >> he had an explosive rebirth ration tv on the edge tonight at nine on cnn lawmakers are trying to shut down planned parenthood, the health care of more than 2 million people is at stake our right to basic reproductive health care is being stolen from us. planned parenthood believes everyone deserves health care. it's a human rights future generations
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today on cnn from election day and the harris and trump campaigns are racing to win over undecided voters that remain in the critical swing states. >> or president donald trump just wrapped up a rally in the battleground brown state of wisconsin a recent cnn poll of polls in wisconsin shows a tight race with no clear leader the trump campaign hoping to gain ground there. and what could be a critical state to harris's path to victory. meantime, the vice president is also racing to communicate to voters how her policies differ, not just from trump's, but also from a current boss, president joe biden. this week, harris will sit down for a number of interviews ranging from the view to the howard stern show, as well as 60 minutes. >> and today she appeared on the hugely popular podcast, color daddy. >> it's one of the most listened to podcasts among women. here's a clip from that
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throughout this election, your identity has been called into question many times your opponent has called you crazy week, fake and dumb how does that affect you? i think it's really important not to let other people define you and usually those people who will attempt to do it don't know you satan's isaac dovere is joining us now with his new reporting on how the harris campaign hopes to create some distance between harris and president biden isaac. >> this has been really a fascinating dynamic from the start. but what are you hearing as we close in on election day? >> yeah, that's right. jessica, in a story up on our website right now, i've got reporting that gets into what one person called to me, the ultimate balancing act here that harris, in these last couple of weeks of the campaign is trying to break through to the people full who are still undecided, still wavering, say to them is different from joe biden, even though i'm part of the biden administration. and you see various ways that this is becoming part of the strategy from when she spoke
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very bluntly about abortion rights in georgia two weeks ago to her trip to the southern border, but also at some policy proposals that she's been rolling out and will continue to roll out. it's a tricky situation that i, as i said, because when you look at, for example, the situation in the middle east, harris is facing political pressure to create some distance from where biden is on that on the other hand, she's in the situation literally at his in the situation room, literally at his right-hand and when she talks about the economy and wanting to say that she knows people are suffering and there's more work to be done that is of course, an economy that for the last three-and-a-half years has been overseen by the biden/harris administration. so weaving through how to make this break and how to credibly say that she's different from biden is the the challenge of the vice president faces here with 30 days left of this campaign yeah. >> and i think it's so interesting too, because even as she and her campaign are trying to figure that out, president biden just keeps tying her to his
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administration. i want to play a clip from friday whether she's aware of where we were saying it from the same song sheet she helped pass all the laws and being employed now, she was a major player and everything we've done including passage of legislation which we were toll, we could never pass. >> and so she's been hurt. her staff is in a locked with mine in terms of all the things we're doing and, isaac, you noted in the piece that the campaign was given a very last-minute heads-up. how did that all unfold in that particular situation? that's when i just remind everyone on friday, the president surprised reporters in the briefing room and answer questions, right? >> he showed up. he's never done that in his time as president so far as you said? yes, i am. i can tell you that that was a surprise to the harris campaign. they found out just a few minutes before that the president would be doing
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that a lot of harris aides did not find that to be helpful. they do not want joe biden to be popping up in that way. they also don't love the idea of him reminding people of their strong connection. go back to that that harris had with trump a couple of weeks ago. one of the best receive lines that they the harris campaign found in their own research about the voter responds to it was when she said, i am not joe biden to have joe biden standing there and saying she's been part of it gets into this really thorny situation for them certainly. >> alright. isaac dovere with great new reporting. thank you so much. we appreciate it and silicon, we're going to talk with north carolina's attorney general as the western part of his state begins well, process of recovery and repair when the path of destruction left by helene than the scene week and asked questions like, what does a comedy show doing on cnn? >> that's too much i want donald now, can you sliced back
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designers that get your heart racing had inside a prices new every day, hurry. they'll be gone in a flash. designer sales at up to 70 send soap gilt.com today >> we want to go to tallahassee, where florida officials, including floar holding a news conference on hurricane milton and how the state is preparing that governor desantis speaking there, let's listen in i particularly in areas that are very sensitive to storm surge, just know that the surge is going to be the primary threat to your life and your safety i'm not saying that you should want to hunker down. >> if there's a major wind speeds, if we had kept three cat four. but in florida, a lot of the buildings can handle it particularly knew you could potentially do that. the surge is just overwhelming. it's like trying to fight mother nature in a way that you're just not going to be able to win and we saw that with helene places in
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horseshoe beach, that survived with almost no damage in ai dahlia, which was almost a cat, it hit category for them down to three before it made anthen helene wiped it out because of the surge. there was just more storm surge and some of these places were just obliterated. so you're looking at potential major storm surge up and down the west coast of florida and yes this is the storm, the eye of the storm goes in the southern part of the western peninsula. you will no doubt have less surge north of that, then you would, if that was the eyewall or if the eyewall was north of where you're at? that's just the way these storms work, but we don't have a way to know fittingly at this point where on that peninsula the storm is gonna make landfall. so you have time now to do what you need to do if you're in one of those areas that can get whacked by this storm surge to make the decision to make sure you can be safe when the storm
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does come as kevin and jared both said, i mean, people sometimes wait. and then when you wait till the very end, you get caught on the roads. it could have hazardous conditions. you have today. clearly you clearly have tomorrow for sure probably have some time tuesday, but i think it will start to get more crowded. i think it'll start to become something that presents some risks of its own. and then just finally on evacuations, if you are in one of those areas you don't have to get on the interstate and drive 200 miles anywhere you go inland or any place that's not going to be a threat for the storm surge, you can hunker down there and then go back when the storm passes. now there will be a lot of shelters that are open. i don't know if anyone's open them yet. i don't think so, but but that will happen as we get close. there's also going to be shelters open in other parts of the state where they may not be getting an impact that there's demand for that. i know kevin's talk to people in the panhandle, some of those counties may do that. so you're
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going to have a lot of options on this but those people in those sensitive areas, and you can potentially have some major, major storm surge. i think a lot of people that just lived through helene seeing 456 feet and some of those places in the florida peninsula on the west coast, that was major that caused a lot of damage this potentially can be more in some of those areas. make sure you're taking appropriate, appropriate precautions after your conversation with the administrator state and how confident are you? are you will be ready to help with this storm it's still working well. >> so we do the request for the pre-landfall. has that been approved yet we it will be. >> i mean, i have know every time we've asked we've gotten approval, so i fully anticipate that that will get approved and then i think unfortunately, because we i think we are going to have significant impacts, the approval for things like individual assistance, all that
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we're going to qualify for all that. and so i don't i don't have any question about that. that's going to happen. i think some of the controversy with fema in some of the other parts of the country was about the rescue mission. some of this stuff, and all that. we have our assets ready for that and we do have some of these urban search and rescue teams that are by-and-large local folks and jacksonville, miami who will be ready to go. i know they are sending some people from other parts of the country. there's a lot of people in north carolina and tennessee right now but i'm confident we'll be approved for that pre-landfall declaration anticipated. yes you're listening to florida governor ron desantis there as he is talking with reporters about preparing for the storm hurricane milton, he's really concerned about the storm surge warning people that's the thing that could be the most dangerous in the store. >> we're of course going to continue to monitor the track of hurricane milton, which is now projected to become a category category four storm in
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the gulf before likely making landfall in florida. still ahead, we are talking with the grandson of a man still being held hostage in gaza now for one year as thousands of people around the world demonstrate marking. this one year since the october 7 hamas terror attacks nine on cnn at humana, we believe your health care should evolve with you in part of that evolution means choosing the right medicare plan for you humana can help hi, my name is sam davis and i'm going to tell you about medicare advantage prescription drugs blanche, that can provide more coverage than original medicare including prescription drug coverage all wrapped up into one convenient plan with original medicare, you're covered for hospital stays and doctor office visits, but you have to meet a deductible for each and then you're still
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deadly hamas-led terror attack on israel, in which hamas killed more than 1,200 israelis and took at least 250 more hostage. >> nearly 100 of those people remain in gaza as hostages. one year later in two of those hostages kidnapped by hamas were oded and yocheved lifshitz. yocheved was released, her husband oded is still being held hostage. and there grandson, daniel daniel has been advocating for negotiating the release of those hostages and daniel is joining us now live from tel aviv daniel, thank you so much for being here as we mark this very somber one-year anniversary. i am so sorry for what your family has had to endure this past year what is the latest you can tell us on what the government has told you about your grandfather who remains a hostage so the last thing we know about my
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grandfather that one of the hostages that have been returned in the first deal, she was with him in captivity for about a month she they didn't get any medicine there. >> they had no you know, no good food. they had very bad conditions. but she was with him for about 30 days and he faint because he has blood pressure issues and she is a handicapped. he helped her all the time in captivity so she told him, i can stay alone so they told her that they moved her for another place and then we don't know anything about my grandfather. so basically that's the last thing we know about my grandfather. after it started, we thought that he was murdered because my grandmother when she was kidnapped, she looked back and she saw him laying down at 4-years-old man fought all his life for peace and human rights. and defend
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israel in the country of israel was laying down in his cactus garden thought it was murdered, but we got another news about from those hostages came back. but we have nothing for the last 11 months i'm here with a shirt of kibbutz-nur-oz, my family and the community and coming from we have 29 hostages still from kibbutz-nur-oz, 30% of the hostages your 84-year-old grandfather. >> it sounds does he take i'm assuming maybe took medicine for his blood pressure. i'm sure you're very worried about his conditions >> the conditions were not good in a place where the hostages was with him in captivity. >> she said they didn't get any medication there and they didn't get enough food. and
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i'm very worried for 84-years-old man, i'm in a great grandfather in which word we leave. when we have such an amazing mediators, the u.s. qatar, egypt need to negotiate between israel and hamas and couldn't release an 84-years-old man great-grandfather is the only great grandfather held hostage in the world this man lived for peace, for coexistence, for human rights, if voting all the wars from 67 to 82 if found the kibbutz to expand the country in the mission of ben-gurion is zionists theism, but is a man who care from everyone. he went to rwanda with bac doctors without boundaries he tried to make everything for gaza to be a good place. he said, you need education from 84 to 2005, you went all the time to say leave.
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okay. oslo. oslo agreements yasser arafat, connection with israel, you need education, only education will make a gasza a good place. and in the end, he's there in the hands of those who worked. he was warning everyone from a mass leadership in gaza. i said is the worst thing can happen. >> we have to take care of that. >> we can't live next to that is the biggest danger for israel. and he's there, you know? >> and daniel, what's your message to the israeli government tonight message is bring your people home. really like find a way to do it i migrant father is 84-years-old my best friend was murdered than today. i've been
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in his memorial in kibbutz-nur-oz. his sister, she's 28-years-old. she's there. how come we are still negotiating for the women for the old-man? >> those people that in every religion, it's unacceptable bulley a scene in the slam. they are the most holy for the quran. the old man, and there's still there for so long i mean, everyone has to work much harder to bring a ceasefire in gaza. that is include the release of all the hostages and it can be with an agreement in lebanon and it can be without an agreement with lebanon i mean, they have to work harder. i know that there are more offers on the table and i call the u.s government as well to shift to be creative and not wait until the election too. maybe then release the hostages i know your heart aches. >> daniel lifshitz, thank you for being here and i hope that
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your grandfather is home with you very soon. >> amen. thank you so much. >> thanks we'll be right back >> we got a race for the ages here with nibbles, the hamster jumping out to a ten point advantage over jaws, the goldfish, what the heck is going on here swim can be done, pill it's a decent assessment minds also work thing. >> i just need someone to cover my shift so as mine elon says your business vehicle is now covered with progressive protected 24/7, just like your home and auto. oh, that's great. >> she didn't at times, just phone time now i'm sorry you know, i heard that ground turkey is the healthiest poultry phone spam is not just the span
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reduced his stress. so why wouldn't we be i'm rahel solomon in new york, is cnn los captioning is brought to you by page publishing. >> if you written a book, will publish it for you. >> if you've written a book page, publishing can help you through the process. we cut through the confusion of the publishing world to make it easy for you call 800 630741 newly unsealed filing from special counsel jack smith is putting donald trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 election back in the spotlight. >> the 165 page filing lays out
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the bulk of evidence in the government's case against the former president but our next guest, cnn legal analyst, elie honig, is calling the move, quote, a cheap shot and a new piece accusing smith of quote bending ordinary procedure in this new filing. >> and elie honig is joining us now, of course, he's also a former us assistant attorney for the southern district of new york. >> elie great to have you here i want you to talk more about your criticism because it seems to be really centered around the timing of this move. of course, we're just one month out from the election yeah. >> jessica, so by criticism here is that what jack smith and the judge did is they reversed the ordinary process the way it works under the rules of procedure i handled thousands of cases every time is the defendant in this case, donald trump filed his motion first and then the prosecution response, depending on whatever that motion is, what jack smith did is he sent to judge chutkan. well, i need to go first here and i need to file a four times over length brief, judge chutkan actually acknowledged that jack smith's request is quote, procedurally
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irregular and then she let them do it anyway and because of that flipping the ordinary procedure on its head, that's what enable jack smith to put this briefing in october shortly before the election. so i think there's a big problem with that. i think it runs counter certainly to the spirit and i believe to the letter of doj policy that you try to avoid doing anything that could impact an election to close torn election. >> and you've even compared this to james comey reopening the email investigation into secretary of state hillary clinton just days before the 2016 election, cleanse actually responded to that idea. and i want to listen to what she had to say i think the situation is completely different and this is in the context of an ongoing criminal procedure that the special counsel has brought against donald trump. many, many months before the run-up to the election. it was frankly motivated by the orders of the
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judge in this trial who has it appears to me ben extremely favorable toward trump. so i think that there's nothing out of the ordinary what do you think about that elie you, jessica, while all respect to secretary clinton, she's the one who suffer the consequences for james comey's. >> i believe, outrageous conduct in 2016, doj found later that it was outrageous. the problem though, with secretary clinton's analysis of the jack smith case is respectfully, she's got her facts wrong first of all, she's confusing the judges here. i think she's thinking of judge cannon who yes, has ruled almost entirely for donald trump, but that's the judge in the other case. the judge here is judge chutkan. i get it. similar names. judge chutkan has ruled almost entirely against donald trump more to the point the last thing we just heard, secretary clinton say was quote, there is nothing out of the ordinary. but as ai describe before, the way they flip this procedure is the opposite of the ordinary. they reversed the actual way
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that motions are done. you can talk to 100 former federal prosecutors have collectively handled 100,000 cases. they will all tell you they never filed their motions first. and i think it begs the question, what was the rush here? why did jack smith have to ask for this? to quote judge chutkan procedurally irregular approach. so i respectfully disagree with the secretary. there and so what happens now yeah. so judge chutkan has to sift through this. there has to be briefing from both sides. so donald trump's team will get a chance to weigh in what they're arguing about is how much of what remains of jack smith's indictment? can stay in the case moving forward, whatever judge chutkan decides that will then be appealed. donald trump has the right to appeal that to the court of appeals and then potentially to the u.s. supreme court. and the point of that is we're not going to get a trial in this case anytime soon. i think we are six months to a year or more away from a trial. if the indictment survives fives appellate review. >> all right. elie honig always good to see you. thank you so much thanks. >> all right.
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>> despite his legal troubles, trump does remain neck and neck with kamala harris would just a month until election day ahead. we're going to run the numbers on where both candidates stand in the handful of states that will determine this election stake. one is coming out episodes says to the world, it's okay to be gay. >> i don't think i realized how much mental i saw the reactions tv on the edge, moments that shaped our culture tonight at nine on cnn when you're a small business owner your to do list a lock see if you can save money with a commercial auto code online. >> so you can get 21 other
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absolutely not going to cogat progressive commercial.com in 2016, donald trump said he would choose only the best people to work in his white house. now, those people have a warning for america. trump is not fit to be president. again, here's his vice president anyone who puts themselves over the constitution should never be president of the united states. >> i cannot in good conscience endorse donald trump than she is defense secretary, do you think trump can be trusted with the nation's secrets ever again no. i mean, it's just irresponsible action that places our service members at risk, places our nation's security at risk is national security adviser donald trump will cause a lot of damage. the only thing he cares it's about is donald trump and the nation's former highest ranking military officer. >> we don't take an oath to a king or queen. or to a tyrant. or a dictator. peter we don't take an oath to a wannabe dictator. >> take it from the people who knew him best. donald trump is too big a risk for america.
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