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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  October 7, 2024 4:00am-5:00am PDT

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vance attack her as if she has been the ones signing the executive orders. >> chris, what do you make of all this? >> well, look, the whole thing is awkward. i mean, they we had something that we'd ever had before, which is first i think it's pretty extraordinary. the whole thing i will agree, i think from the harris campaigns point of view, you that joe biden just kind of took the decks 30 days, whatever it is off, they'd be perfectly happy with that. i will. but this on this blitz, she should have started this a long time ago. this is too light. there's obviously a three-line among a lot of voters that they're picking up. we still don't know who this woman is. we don't know what believes, should have started this in august, but better no, not but but it should have started a month ago, but i do think it's a situation where we have a little bit of the bias towards what she is doing versus what
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trump is doing because he's been not doing much. fair enough. >> all right. we are over the top of 7:00 a.m. thanks, guys for joining us. thanks to all of you for being with us as well. i'm kasie hunt. don't go anywhere. cnn new central starts right now year since the horrific hamas terror attack on israel, the deadliest day for the jewish people since the holocaust. >> survivors and families gathering to mark the solemn anniversary as israel now stands on the brink of war with iran and historic hurricane takes direct aim at huge population centers in florida a state of emergency declared in 51 counties, the rising possibility of evacuations for hundreds of thousands of residents and we are now 29 days until election day. friends, vice president kamala harris trying something new this week, going on a media blitz while donald trump is headed back to the battlegrounds. i'm kate
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bolduan with john berman, sara sidner is out today. erin burnett is joining us from israel. this is cnn new central the one-year anniversary of the october 7 attacks, 1,200 people murdered, 250 taken hostage, 101 still in captivity and this morning one year later, new attacks is israel's engaged in war on multiple fronts let's get right to cnn's erin burnett live in tel aviv in hostage square. good morning. eric in hostage square and families are gathering here a somber day and a day of great sadness, a day of grieving, but also a day for many of outrage and anger that 97 hostages taken on october 7 are still in gaza, many of them believed to be dead. >> an incredible number,
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perhaps believed to be dead. and there is outrage and there is grieving that is what we're seeing here. but on a day that israel may choose john to reframe, to reframe as a day where they strike back at iran. they believe the head of the octopus that struck them when hamas attacked israel last october tolber, seventh, and that of course is the moment that we're in. when you are in this country, you are seeing rockets coming in from hamas and strikes today, the northern border strikes back-and-forth throughout the night here in tel aviv, already today, told to take shelter. it is a country on edge it is a region on edge. and of course, as you mentioned, it is a country at war, a war on many fronts, and a war with iran whatever you want to call this moment, when you hit somebody with 200 missiles and you're going to strike back that would be a war. jim sciutto is here with me now in hostage square and jim, at this morning, obviously people told to take shelter here. there is this palpable, it is not just a moment of
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grief. it is a moment of a country that is now fully at war and there's a lot of anger here. where are those hostages and listen to the threat of war is constant that i was among those who was sent into the shelter this morning is yet another alarm goes off. >> it's almost like it's like this sunrises, you're going to get an alarm. it's part of daily life here, but that's a very real threat. but, but the emotions are as well as we stand here, several of the people behind us that they are relatives of those still held there for them deeply, deeply personal. but as you know, spending so much time here, it is quite a deeply personal issue for israel as well and not just the hostages still held there, but the continuing threat that they see from hezbollah in the north gaza in the south. and of course iran to the east. and that's why of the many disagreements we run into here over politics, et cetera. approach to the war. it's hard to find someone here who does not want to send some sort of message to iran, right? about israel's ability to defend itself and of course the question is, what is that response what does that response? >> and you know, last night as
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as we're awake through the night you know, there is this sense of, it is now, it is now every single well night, we know that it will be and that is the crucial question. >> you have meetings, you've got the foreign ministers, you've got the defense minister's, you have a military ready to go? yes. right. you have a target list ready to go, whether they have finalized every one of them, it is ready to go and there is you talk to us sources who are dealing with the israelis to israelis, i know you hear this too. >> they are chomping at the bit. they want a hit and they want to hit harder and a sense i get from, from israeli officials, i speak to is they would like to have us support for this and that's not i'm not speaking about military support, but us backing for for a strike that. they take or the form of the strike that they take against iran and their discussions back and forth. and there seems to be pressure applied from the u.s. about how far israel goes some pressure, don't go so far as to attack the nuclear sites concerns in washington about an expanding war but that said, at the end of the day israelis are quite
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confident, i think is really israeli leaders are quite steadfast that they will respond almost with or without us support. they hope to get to that point. right? but it's not an necessity, right? >> and obviously, you know, kate is we stand here when you talk to us military officials who are involved in this they very much will be honest and they will set that israel will do whatever it's going to do and they will try to work with them. but israel does expect that the u.s. will back them after they do it in whatever the repercussions are. and that is a fair for expectation at this point, there's been no wavering in defense. >> we should note in defense that doesn't necessarily mean us planes by any means. you're gonna be in the air with israeli jackson, cetera. but but certainly one reason that you have such a military presence in the region is too both deter, but also respond if there were further attacks on israel, right? >> and for example, kate, i've been told us the u.s. for example, will not and does not expect to be involved in anything offensive like refueling israeli jets that they would manage that
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themselves. these distinctions, huge difference became a year ago as everybody was reeling, i think about how the world has changed. this war that is engulfing the region and golfing the united states. >> and the tens of thousands of people who have been killed, two-thirds of the building in gaza destroyed firebombs over beirut it is an incredibly perilous and fraught moment that we are in even as we stand here back to you absolutely. just how how the middle east has changed, how shaken it is. now, one year later after those horrific terrorist attacks and what's happened since then? >> jim, aaron, thank you both so much for going to be big, be getting back to them and israel throughout today show also today, president biden, vice president kamala harris, her political opponent, donald trump. >> they're all taking a pause for a moment to commemorate october 7, the white house says that that vice president harris will be planting a memorial tree at the vp's residents in dc, while the former president donald trump is expected to speak at a remembrance event this evening in miami. cnn's
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arlette saenz is live outside the white house for us on what today could bring what is president biden planning? >> well, kate, president biden and vice president kamala harris are each commemorating in marking this solemn day in their own ways as they are mourning the loss of lives on that october 7 attack by hamas. while also once again reiterating the united states support for israel to defend itself. now, present seven biden and first lady jill biden, will be joined here at the white house this morning by a rabbi for a yard site candle-lighting ceremony. that is a tradition in the jewish face to face, to observe the anniversary of a death, vice president kamala harris and her husband's second gentleman, doug emhoff, will be delivering remarks a bit later. for this afternoon and also planting a pomegranate tree at the vice president's residence a pomegranate tree is a sign of hope and righteousness in judaism. and it comes as both biden and harris are renewing
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their calls for achieving a ceasefire deal that would bring the hostages home and also put an and to this war, president biden in a statement this morning writing quote we will not stop working to achieve a ceasefire deal in gaza that breached hostages home, allows for a surge in humanitarian aid to ease the suffering on the ground, assures israel security and ends this war. he adds israelis and palestinians alike deserve to live in security, dignity, and peace. now there are four americans who are still believed to be alive, held by hamas in gaza and several other families are still working to secure the return of the remains of their loved ones who have died while in hamas captivity yesterday, i'm told told by a source familiar that the several of the families of american hostages spoke with two senior white house officials, brett mcgurk and hochstein. just one day ahead of this anniversary of october 7, but it comes at a
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time when there has been little traction in the talks to try to secure a hostage deal. now, biden and harris in there statements each also acknowledged that the u.s. supports israel's right to defend itself, including in the face of attacks by iran, it really speaks to the complicated dynamics at this moment as israel and the u.s. are grappling with this conflict on multiple fronts at a time when president biden's still remain steadfast and trying to prevent this conflict from widening out even further. >> if that is even possible at this point, arlette, thank you very much for that coming up for us, we have some breaking news in just moments ago, hurricane milton has now strengthened yet again now a category three hurricane. it's headed straight for some of the very same parts of florida hit hardest by hurricane helene, less than two weeks ago, have an update on that. kamala harris making a media blitz this week with less than a month ago with the election taking on donald trump over his position on reproductive rights. and lebron james and
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hair and skin formulas today at pros.com titled tuesday night cbs all right. breaking news, milton is now a major hurricane, a category three storm heading directly at huge population centers in florida. just look at that map. tampa, st. pete, fort myers, sarasota, clearwater, naples. all right. in the cone there, 15 million
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people people under flood watches dangerous storm surge is expected. let's get right to cnn meteorologist derek van dam for a look at the very latest on this really historically problematic storm. derek john. so we are facing down a monster. this is the last thing anybody wants to see at this moment considering the storm fatigue that we have from our previous major hurricane strike, not less than two weeks ago that been of course hurricane helene. so now we're facing a strengthening hurricane, milton now as a major hurricane with winds sustained at 100 120 miles per hour. and notice clearing in the center, we call that a pinhole eye, and that means that this storm is continuing to organize strength and basically the bottom falling all within major hurricane helene. the reason for this updated information from the national hurricane center because as we speak, the hurricane hunters, their job to fly within the heart of the storm. i have found a central
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pressure of roughly 900 and 954 millibars. so again, the lower that number, the stronger the storm they're also finding wins co coinciding with category three strength. now, we have as of 5:00 a.m. hey updated list of alerts. we have a hurricane watch in place where you see the shading of pink that includes tampa bay southward into fort myers and naples. and i want you to hear just what tampa bay mayor had to say about the oncoming hurricane you can go now go you cannot wait and see you have been told what's going to happen. we're fortunate if it wobbles one way or the other and we don't take the direct impact, but let's plan on that. >> it's always a game of miles where the worst impacts will be held. but now is your window to prepare and evacuated. have a plan john, this storm has gone
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under rapid intensification yesterday morning. it was only at 50 miles per hour. now, we're sitting at a one 120 mile per hour monster of a storm and this is really crucial information here. the initial storm surge forecast for tampa bay eight to 12 feet that actually eclipses last week or two weeks ago, hurricane helene, storm surge values from a storm that was west of tampa bay, and that set records good values for this area. they are still in cleanup mode. it's already raining there ahead of the storm, so flash flooding is going to be a major concern as well with the storm. >> derek. derek, if i can can you be explicit as to when landfall is expected at this point and i understand it's a huge variance. i mean, you could be anywhere from north of tampa, south of tampa? but where right now expected landfall could be? >> yeah, that is such an important bit of information to for our viewers because what we've seen in the modeling trend overnight is a slowing of this landfall time. so it's
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more of a delayed landfall. we believe that it will be sometime wednesday evening into thursday mornings particularly across the central west coast of the florida peninsula so we really need to nail down the specifics, specifics of this. but from what we can tell, this storm still has a little bit of ways to go before it reaches western coastline of florida. and that delayed timing is so crucial for people who are still getting there last preparations in place ahead of the storm. >> again, millions of people need to pay very close attention to this. derek van dam. thank you very much for that all right. >> this is a quote, not all women aspire to be humble. the new comments made by vice president harris on the wire i held the popular podcast, call her daddy. those comments this morning going viral on social media and lebron and bronny james, they make nba history. the first father's son nba duo to take the court at the same time
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ling plan enroll today weekend as questions like, what does the comedy show doing on cnn that's too much i want donald. now, can you well, i got news for you saturday at nine on cnn 29 days to election
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day. but today, more people are voting early voting begins in california, montana, and nebraska, which really reinforces the reality that the presidential candidates have literally zero time to waste to get their message out as people showing to vote on that note, vice president kamala harris is launching a week long media blitz, something that she has been criticized for avoiding so far. she kicked it off by sitting down with a hugely popular call her daddy podcast cnn's priscilla alvarez is joining us now for more on this alex cooper, the host of the podcast. she said in the introduction and that she was given 40 minutes with the vice president for this interview, which is a long time for anyone who has interviewed a president or vice president. so what did he say? >> a long time, but call her daddy has millions of listeners, many of whom are young women and while they talked about a range of issues, a lot of the focus was on women's issue, something that alex cooper said she was going to stay focused on giving her
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audience and over the course of that interview, the vice president was asked about former president donald trump's comments that he was the protector of women and this is what she had to say president, hand-selected three members of the united states supreme court with the intention that they would undo the protections of roe v wade and they did just as he intended, and there are now 20 states with trump abortion bans, including bands that make no exception for rape or incest. >> this is the same guy that is now saying that this is the same guy who said that women should be punished for having abortions this is the same guy who uses the kind of language he does to describe women message that you hear from the vice president at her rallies, but not everyone listens or watches those rallies. so this
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is the campaign trying to amplify that message at a moment when polls show neck and neck race between her and trump's. so over the course of this week, she has 16 few minutes today. that was already taped tomorrow. she will be with the view the howard stern show and the late show with stephen colbert than later in the we, she has univision townhall in las vegas to walz, also going to be out there with jimmy kimmel tonight. now, she's trying to reach different audiences audiences here here, for example, the howard stern show mostly a male audience. the goal from the campaign they say is to try to boost turnout, especially in the last few weeks of the election. and as some states are already beginning to vote with, certainly what we are watching unfold here is a campaign that is trying to reach more voters where they are maybe knowing that this race continues to be just so close so close, so far under the cycle and has proven that there hasn't been a single
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big, single thing that's really moved anything in a significant way. it now comes down to the turnout. of course, it's good to see priscilla. thank you so much. alright, so scary moments on a frontier flight, scary moments on a frontier flight, flames shooting out from under the plain. and what is being described as a hard landing and new cnn reporting, kamala harris looking for ways to break with president biden on several issues it's the campaign heads into this final stretch the five things you need to know to start your day, get the news you need about this for an earnings call headlines in five minutes or less humans, five things have kate bolduan streaming weekdays on cnn.com, and ryan reynolds here for, i guess, my hundreds mint commercial no, no. >> no. >> no but it's unlimited premium wireless for $15 a month power. >> there still people paying
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year after the hamas terror attacks on israel on october 7, questions still remain about potential warning signs that may have been missed in the leadup to those terror attacks, cnn's jim sciutto reports after october 7, visiting the nahal oz base in southern israel brings al eshel both a chance to honor his daughter, ronnie and the most painful memories from here they came in in the october 7, this is where they entered the u.s is their way they came from gaza. >> ronnie was one of more than a dozen idf soldiers in an all female observer unit who raised the alarm as hamas terrorists crossed into israel that morning. after warning for months of an impending attack i'm going
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never came. they were killed along with more than 30 other israeli soldiers at the base while several others were taken hostage for al today, each location inside the base brings pain here is the table able that the girls was sitting and aiding and smiling and laughing very night before the october 7 attack. in this video recorded by roni's fellow soldier operations room, ar lit a candle to mark the jewish new year. at the very same spot
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where roni issued those ominous warnings and close to where she died we don't have any holidays we hate holidays. she's near she's not with us. >> this is where the observer unit was based. this is where they were issuing those warnings prior to the attack that something was coming and sadly, on the morning of october 7, this is where many of them were killed. the idf's failure, not just to heed the observers warning, but also that could come to their rescue remain crucial questions a full year since october 7, part of a much broader security failure that day. it was on these now burned up computer screens that roni and her colleagues told their parents they'd seen worrying signs from hamas, including accounts of fighters testing the fence line the israeli military ignored other warning signs as well, including these training videos hamas posted openly online in the months before and earlier
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intelligence sense uncovered by israeli media about hamas's intent to attack israeli communities and even take multiple hostages we are retired brigadier general amir avivi is former deputy commander of the idf's gaza division. >> they thought that hamas is mostly worried about the stability inside gaza and the economy. >> so you're saying it was a misreading of hamas rather than not listening to internal warnings generally speaking, yes. >> but i think that also at a certain point where the observers said again and again and again that i think things that are out of usual at the at a certain point that we're commanded and said, okay, that's it. >> we don't want to hear about this anymore. >> the idf and israeli government have insisted a full investigation into what went wrong that day cannot take place. while the country is fighting a war on multiple fronts. now we put the picture of the whole girls today, a all and the other families have built a memorial for their
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loss. daughters overlooking nahal oz base. >> here is romi but there's still waiting for what he wants most now accountability has anyone from the army or the government ever said to you, i take responsibility. no one no one has anyone ever said. >> i'm sorry. no one i need answers and i need the responsibility and i need that through a father's simple demand after the worst loss imaginable, jim sciutto, cnn, nahal, ours, southern israel our thanks to jim for that. all right. new this morning, cnn has learned the top aides to vice president harris are wrestling with how much space you should put between herself and president biden. cnn's isaac dovere has this new reporting alright how exactly does this manifest itself? how strong is the feeling? and how
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might it affect plans over the next 30 days well, it's a big question for the harris campaign over the course of this next month. >> one person that i spoke to call this the ultimate balancing act, harris has to speak to the change that voters clearly say that they want. but also be credible about this. she is, she has been part of this administration. she continues to be part of this administration. but you look, even what's going on this week, even today, we are talking about how she and joe biden are marking october 7 she has not distanced herself from joe biden on any of the policy issues when she also is sitting in the situation room with him dealing with these things but they put at separate statements this morning marking the anniversary. they will have separate appearances joe biden lighting a candle and a ceremony. the white house, kamala harris, playing a good tree at the naval observatory they will not be together. that is not a mistake. they're both in washington. they could be together, john, but they're choosing to be separate as harris looks for various ways
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to show that she separate from biden also talk about policy ideas and more promises that she will have. the jewel tried to put in place should she be elected president isaac i was reading in your reporting, they actually have data which indicates that when policies are proposals or statements or tied to president biden they do worse than if she says it independently of her. >> can you explain that yeah. >> that's data that was put together by an outside group called blueprint that tested a bunch of statements that people said they said, well, how would you feel if kamala harris said this versus that and anytime you mentioned biden, it did worse. anytime she said this is what i would do differently than what what's been there that did better, that data has gone through a bunch of people on the harris campaign. they are aware of it. they're paying attention to it. and that is part of what is going to continue driving this here with harris looking whether it's on
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abortion or immigration, what's going on at the southern border or economic proposals, ways that she can say there is more work to be done rather than the biden approach is generally been, this has been successful very interesting reporting. >> isaac dovere, thank you so much. appreciate you being with us. so this morning, one answer from vice president harris, her appearance on the wildly popular podcast call her daddy is setting social media ablaze this morning. listen i saw the governor of arkansas said my kids keep me humble unfortunately, kamala harris doesn't have anything keeping her humble. how did that make you feel? >> i don't think she understands that. there are a whole lot of women out here who one are not aspiring to be humble all right, with us now, democratic strategist julie roginsky, founder of lift our voices and republican strategist, neil chatterley, he
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cheered the federal energy regulatory commission during the trump administration. >> so it's interesting different generations of people see things differently. we had brazil on reporting on vice president harris, her answers on choice and abortion but what seems to be resonating, resonating with younger women really in a huge way, are these comments that people are not necessarily aspiring to be humble. we went on social media gmail hill road. i'm not aspiring to be humble, put that on a t-shirt. we saw someone else posting on tiktok, kamala harris saying there are women who are not aspiring to be humble, heal to me. >> so what do you think? >> well, first of all, i want to take this moment to say no, it's october 7, and i just want to say that to the hostage families. my heart is with you and before we get to american politics that just wanted to get that out, look, i'm a few years younger than kamala harris, but not much and i'm so glad she said it because women are so tight part of waiting in line, and that's really what this is right? be humbled, being too demure wait your turn.
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>> and the reality is so many of us are sick of doing that and i'm not suggesting that this is a democratic or republican talking point. i think there are a lot of republican women who probably feel the same that we don't want to get in line that we're not sitting here waiting to have somebody approve of us. women are constantly asked to be seeking approval from somebody well, we're kind of tired of seeking approval from anybody but ourselves. and i think she spoke for a lot of us. i'm generation x. i know there are millennials and gen z women who feel the same way. i know they're baby boomer women who feel the same way who are sick and tired of sitting around waiting for somebody to pass out. so the head and to say, good job, way to go enough, enough were supposed to be doing it for ourselves. and i'm glad she said it and by the way, if you're talking about humble, there's really not a contrast. i mean, are you suggesting that her opponent, donald trump, has ever been humbled about anything in his life? yet she's expected maybe it's a woman, maybe because the same rules don't apply to anybody than trump to suddenly sit there and pretend that she has to wait her turn or in some way shape or form asked for permission and she doesn't. none of us does. and i love that and i think it's great
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for women for her to say that this podcast, how does appearing on this and the other types of media that the vice president is doing. how does this help her break through and with whom? >> look, it's smart. she needs to be out there. she needs to be introducing herself to american voters. the fact is, she's the vice president, the united states yet a lot of americans aren't familiar with her. and i think this brings out her personality. i think going on howard stern is very, very smart. look, i love howard stern. he's a fantastic interviewer. and so the types of deep dive questions that he will do, which will tap into not just her policy perspectives, but her her life and who she is. i think she needs to be doing these kinds of things. i'm actually curious as to why the campaign hasn't had her out more frequently, why they've been trying to hide her. donald trump's out every day on every platform
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imaginable talking she needs to be doing the same thing. i think these kinds of things doing this podcast going on stern it's it's the smart play. >> do you have an answer to that question like, why not do stern three weeks ago or why not do the color daddy podcast three weeks ago i have said from the beginning she should have been doing local media from day one, from the jump, and she shouldn't have been doing stuff like this from the john, so i don't have an answer because i don't think it's a smart strategy. >> i will say donald trump has been out there on fox. he's been out there talking to his own echo chamber on twitter and with elon musk. i don't necessarily think that he's been out there doing the hard interviews that apparently she has been doing and she's been he won't even do 60 minutes. i mean, 60 minutes as the gold standard, trump refuses to do that. she's doing that i don't actually want to shift a little bit. >> it's under julia right now. but ideal right now but i do want to ask you, neil about this, this hurricane. we have this hurricane milton now a category three storm headed right at tens of millions of people in florida. just what the what is the impact that these constant natural
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disasters have? on a campaign so with so little time to go before election day, i mean, we saw to an extent sandy in 2012. but, you know, new jersey wasn't exactly a swing state. i'm not saying florida is, but this does impact millions of people look, i was chairman of the federal energy regulatory commission. my role in that was to make sure that the lights stayed on so i focused on how we could keep power affordable and reliable and on in the face of these kinds of extreme weather events, i've been very vocal. i believe climate change is real and we need to take urgent steps to mitigate emissions. we're seeing right now the real life impacts of climate change that's my focus. i understand we're a month out from election. everyone's talking about electoral politics for me, i'm more focused on the people in
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line of this hurricane and what the impact will be on their lives and on climate change. i'm not focused on the political impact of it. >> no, it clearly saving lives is what's important in getting people back up on their feet after it hits is what's most important you know, how careful do you have to be if you're a politician when talking about this, or how much can you help? >> well, of course, if you're the president or the vice president, you have a tremendous amount that you can do to help. and the federal government has been having a wonderful response. north of florida and some parts of florida, obviously also with the previous hurricane. but i will say that there's so much as information there's so much information going out there that is contrary to helping people. it's being spread by people like elon musk is being spread on social media. donald trump is helping to amplify it. and i think enough, enough, these are people's lives at stake and you have republican office holders in places like north carolina saying you are harming, actively harming my constituents by saying what you're saying, which is completely false information. so i think we need to just stop
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with that and focus on the fact that there are rescue efforts already underway. a little north of florida, there may be in the coming days in florida itself. and for the sake of florida and the sake of the south, i think it's time for people to stop talking about nonsense and start focusing on and what they really need to focus on. and thank you and you'll for saying that about climate change because you're absolutely right. >> all right. julia, chatterley, thank you so much for being with us. both of you are ron james is making history again this time with his son, bronny, the two are now the first father-son duo to play together on the same nba team. >> lebron james is entering his 20s second season and he posted on social media after the game, calling it a surreal understandably so he does go wire has much more on this big debut. there was so much lead up to it. it is so wild to see them on the court together. tell me anymore. >> yeah. okay. lebron entered the nba, was 18-years-old. he's now 39. the league it's all time leading score. bronny was drafted by the lakers out of usc in june. yesterday was his 20th birthday. here's the
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moment, bronny entering the game oks the second quarter father, son duo playing in an nba game at the same time lebron would go on to drop 19 points in this game, five rebounds, four assists to blocks in just 16 minutes. and bronny didn't score in this 13 minutes, but he did snag to rebounds. you have to listen to how much this moment meant to lebron james someone who didn't have that, you know, growing up to be able to be able to have that influence on your kids and how their flaws for your son to be able to have moments which was signed and it ultimately to be able to work that your son nothing else. one of the greatest things you want to father could ever hope for wish for very cool moment. kate and i'm sure we'll see many more of those moments to come and we'll get you those updates as we come out thinking about having my six-year-old daughter do a hit with me here sure just because that would be so cool i just saying i know. i don't want to diminish what we do, but having are having her
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children talk on tv with us are reporting lives slightly different than playing at that elite level together with your see you. thank you so much. coy it really is remarkable job to see these the two of them on the court to go. >> yeah. yeah. a little bit less dunking in basketball than on tv. all right. this morning, students being forced out of their dorms for the rest of this school year after hundreds of bats moved in in new reporting on which presidential candidates economic policies would add more to the national debt. here's a hint. >> one of cnn sports central brought to you by safe flight for auto glass experts due to quote, and scheduled today. >> it's safe like.com seems likely case. >> why did we choose safely a hallways working on a project while loading up our suv one
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nine on cnn survival from hurricane helene in north carolina, richard and cathy pools home sustained damage kathy had been battling cancer during the storm. she fought for two hours to keep the floodwaters from rushing inside that's the debris underneath the water rushing. >> i mean, like ten or 15 mile an hour and hit me and it just kept knocking me down luckily, i was, you know, was able to get back up and i didn't drown, did my own backyard. she really followed it a proud of that was why i was put on this or my husband went to dry on defiant libya that not kathy said adrenaline kept her going this morning, an investigation underway over frontier airlines flight seemed to catch fire as it made a hard landing in los
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vegas, smoke was reported in the cockpit flames seen under the plane. >> airport officials say the tires blew, 190 passengers and seven crew were on the flight from san diego. all are okay. so more than 500 students that northern arizona university forced out of their dorm after the building became infested with bats uff and i was like, w were sent out an email telling us to ams around in our rooms in and of themselves, bhatt's not that dangerous except university official said, one of the bats tested positive for rabies. that is a serious case. concern. and due to those health concerns as students will stay in a different location for the rest of the school year. >> kate, i mean, that is crazy and they've got a lot of school year left. all right. much more on that. maybe we'll talk about that later. this we're following this morning, this morning, israel's military
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launched a new ground operation in northern gaza saying their troops have encircled jabalya after seeing signs of hamas regrouping israeli military, the israeli military also issuing a vacuum orders in southern gaza after ordering residents to evacuate the north, the idf carried out airstrikes over the weekend in northern gaza. this new push comes as the world marks one and year since the hamas terror attack on israel that ignited this war. and as israel now faces a growing conflict with hezbollah to its north and lebanon these really prime minister benjamin netanyahu, now calling it a war on seven fronts. >> today, israel is defending itself on seven fronts against the enemies of civilization for defending ourselves against this barbarism. israel is defending civilizations against those who seek to impose a dark age of fanaticism on all of us rest assured israel will fight until the battle is won. for our sake. >> and for the sake of the
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peace and security of the entire world. joining us, right now is retired brigadier general, steve anderson, general. it's good to see you. thanks for coming in netanyahu's description of the seven front war. against hamas and other militant groups in gaza, hezbollah in lebanon, houthis in yemen, various iran-backed militias in iraq and syria, to ron's efforts to arm palestinian militants since in the west bank. and then of course, iran itself what do you see as the greatest challenge for israel now to manage that successfully and also for the united states to support that successfully. >> well, thank you, kate, for having me on and i think what netanyahu's comments and the presence situation, new attacks in gaza point to the operational success of this these efforts this past year, but the political failures of israel and that in yahoo, i mean, they have not made any
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progress on a two-state solution. and that's the only way this is going to end. otherwise, kate, we're going to be having this conversation in a year i mean, they've been able to control gaza. they essentially have an occupation force there. they've been able to take out a lot of leadership in hamas in hezbollah they'd had remarkable success, their, their intelligence have probably penetrated the iranian leadership, but we still have 101 hostages, 07 of whom are americans it's been an absolute humanitarian disaster there over 40,000 palestinians have died the israeli economy is in bad shape. well, they've have to mobilize for the past year and there is still been no accountability for the egregious failures on the 7 october to protect the israeli people so the fact that they do not have a two-state solution, that's why this is going on, and that's why i will continue and that's why this war seems to be expected candi the french
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president am, i am macron this weekend actually called on the international community to stop supplying weapons to israel. kind of a partial arms embargo. weapons that would be earmarked are used in gaza there is no sign that the united states is any closer to agreeing with that position. but if the international community would move that direction as this continues to drag on, what impact would that have? >> who would have a huge to sport in the world. >> but world opinion is going to change against him if he doesn't find some kind of political solution, they just can't continue to escalate this event. they can continue to attack. now, look, i get it. the 200 missiles, the stroke strike last week, they need he to retaliate to that and of course, what happened on 7 october is absolutely terrible, but this cannot continue to go on for years. i mean, that's what's going to happen if we don't have some kind of a political solution is easy for me to say that because i'm a
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military guy, but doggone it. that's what we need. we need the politicians to take charge the palestinians need self-rule. we need to have a 2-d state solution to this problem i want you to just kind of on this day to look back in the last 12 months, a year since the october 7 terror attack in israel, how do you describe? >> how much things have changed in the middle east and last 12 months where it's gotten much worse this obvious to see because we're now on the brink of a major regional conflict. if we're not there already again, it just points out to the failures politically in netanyahu and israeli people of course, what happened was absolutely terrible, but we've got to make sure that the netanyahu understands that he needs a coalition to support them if he loses the support of the world. in particular, the united states. >> he's going to have a very, very difficult road to hoe but
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we've got to do everything we can to drive him to politically solve this problem for tiebreak. do general steve anderson. thank you so much for coming in. >> john all right. we've got new reporting this morning, a study on what the presidential candidates economic plans would do to the national debt. matt egan has been digging through this i understand one can't a lot more. >> yeah, absolutely. john national debt is going up no matter who wins in november, but it's gonna go up much, much faster if trump wins. that is according to this new analysis from the committee for a responsible federal budget, it funds that the harris plan would cause $3.5 trillion. that is nothing to sneeze at, but look at this more than twice as much as the harris plant is what trump's would cost 7.5 trillion. et's look at how they got here. the trump plans most expensive line item is extending the 2017 cuts. that alone would c

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