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tv   CNN Newsroom  CNN  October 13, 2024 3:00pm-4:00pm PDT

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i'm jessica dean in new york and we are 23 days from election day in america. tonight, donald trump is holding a rally in arizona looking to shore up support in that key swing state it does. >> trump appears to be gaining traction with a key demographic has spent panic voters according to new polling presidential support in this year's race is split 56% for kamala harris, but 37% for trump. and while she's still leads that is trump's best margin among hispanic voters in any election cycle in which he's run cnn's alayna treene is on the campaign trail with team trump. she joins us now with the very latest alayna, despite trump's very dark rhetoric, rhetoric toward immigrants and the border, and latinos. he is not losing support with them. what are you hearing >> he's not and i apologize if i'm a little bit more quiet because he is speaking on stage behind me right now. but look, donald trump over the past several days now has really
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escalated his dark anti immigrant rhetoric, particularly when it comes to undocumented migrants in this country we heard him in aurora, colorado and a blue stayed on friday saying that he would support the death penalty for any migrant in this country, whether they're here legally or not, who kills an american citizen? our law enforcement officer, that's actually something he's supported and reiterated today. but when it all comes down to all of this, jessica, the bottom line from when i talked to donald trump's team is they argue that actually a lot of hispanic voters are buy-in to that language in to donald trump's playbook of stoking fears in voters minds about immigration in this country and about the border. and that's why you're seeing kenyan lean into it so heavily. i have to tell you, jessica, i know, you know this, but i go to multiple trump rallies a week. the language he has been using in recent days as it relates to immigration is far darker then we have heard, or i've heard at least pretty much this entire election
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cycle, he is very much leaning aggressively into that as we look ahead to the final stretch of this cycle. now, i do want you to take a listen to some of what he said because he's really entire speech so far in arizona has been about the border and about some of those fears. i want you to listen to what he said in his own words for four straight years, she's important an army of a illegal alien gang members and migrant criminal analysts from the dungeons all over the world not, not south america, all over the world. >> they come from prisons and jails insane asylums mental institutions from venezuela, from the congo all over xi's resettle them into your communities to prey upon innocent just american people as you can see there, jessica really painting a very dark picture of the state of the country. and i can tell you
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when i talked to trump's team, they say that this isn't going to change, that they believe this rhetoric and trump believes this himself, believes at this all right delivered him to the white house in 2016. they think that he can use this kind of language to help him get to the white house again, in november 1. other thing i want to make and chin and we just it was just moments ago that this happened. donald trump called a series of border patrol agents on to the stage where they said that they endorsed donald trump. they talked about on how he would be the person who would make america the safest as it relates to the border. but then donald trump actually did something that we haven't heard yet. he announced a new policy that he would call for. he said that trying to address the shortage of border patrol agents. he said that he would announce a goal of hiring 10,000 new border patrol agents if he is elected he also said he would call on congress to give those agents at 10% raise as well as a $10,000 retention and signing bonus. again, all playing into his broader really
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conversation around the border and what he's arguing is now the number one issue for his campaign. i know that we've talked about this a lot, jessica, that a lot of his allies and republicans who want him to win in november are trying to get them to focus more on the economy. he's even said this publicly. he said this the other day in reno, nevada that he actually thinks the border is the number one issue and that should be the primary, not the economy. and i think that's why you're hearing him talk about this issue so much in this final stretch before november 5, jessica elena, he also talked about the enemy from within which he left a little hazy but said something about crazy leftists and that he could use the military if needed, to take care of them. so again, just painting quite a picture there in arizona this afternoon alayna treene. thank you so much. i want to stay on the campaign trail. vice president kamala harris is in north carolina before she heads to pennsylvania tomorrow, she'll go to michigan and wisconsin later this week. eva mckend is with the harris campaign in north carolina and joins us now. and eva, we're starting
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to hear from a number of democrats getting very anxious yes. about the tightening of this race, this new polling today showing showing the data right before that that it historically tight race is now even tighter well. just let me begin by telling you what the vice president told voters here in greenville. >> she went after the former president arguing that he isn't being transparent enough with voters when it comes to neglecting to do that 60 minutes interview that long honored tradition when it comes to doing another debate with her that she argued that his team is just too scared to have him in these situations and this lends itself to a broader argument that the vice president is trying to make. that she is trying to be an open book here. she released her medical records, the former a president. she argued did not, and she argues on the campaign trail, but he is fundamentally unserious and
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does not have the character or the temperament to lead in this moment. take a listen to how this sounds on the trail. >> i, do believe donald trump is an unserious man but the effects of him being back in the white house would be brutally serious just imagine donald trump would no guardrails he who has vowed, if reelected? if he would be a dictator on day one anxieties, jess, you know, that campaign is adjusting in real time to this. >> you see the vice president doing very intentional outreach to black voters as she tries to recreate president biden winning multiracial coalition of 2020. we saw her meet with black electeds in raleigh community and faith leaders.
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she spoke at a black church and she also met with black farmers, another big message here today, jess if you can, she told her supporters here, get out and vote early early voting begins in this state in just four days. >> jess, you're write-up on it aren't even mckend for us there in north carolina. thank you so much joining us now to discuss is pollster and communications strategist frank luntz. frank, thanks so much for joining us. i always love having you on because i learn a lot from what you're learning from just talking to so many voters. and i wonder if you'll just start us off with where you see and what you are hearing about this moment in this race they take this very seriously actually prepared for this segment. >> and some of the things have two people going to be angry at half the things that i say. >> the issue agenda is set. it is going to be and it's not the economy it's affordability is prices, its costs, that and inflation are the two key issues those are going to drive
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this last 23 days. and frankly, donald trump has the advantage on both on immigration, the reason why he wants to talk about immigration is because the the current president president biden and vice president harris seems so weak on the issue i will raise this point carefully. that to the average american calling for the death penalty for someone who's here illegally killing a cop is not insane. it's not left, it's not abusive, it's exactly what the left does center and the right would call for that trump. and i realized that he's gone off the rails in some of his statements and you can replay them to your viewers right now. but there's a reason why he's going up that he's recovering after one of the worst. did they performances in modern history. it's because he is speaking the language of the average american and she's still
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isn't coming clean about where she stands on some issues and what she's all about and it is a genuine problem for her campaign. and i understand why democrats were getting frustrated because there are key groups right now will tie knows young african american men, and union members that are traditionally with the democrats that aren't in this campaign right now and on that note, frank, we've seen recent polls showing harris's support among black men is lower than certainly were biden was, i know you hosted a focus group with black men who are supporting trump. >> i want to play a clip from that donald trump is because simply i want to make america great. >> again big. the last four years, we have seen when i watched on the debate stage where a lot of lochi goes from a democratic candidate. there has been vice president
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united states for three years. and what, eight months and nothing that she proposed, she or or spoke on. she had a plan attached give us some more context around that conversation you had it's not that they're pro republican because they aren't. >> but donald trump reaches them in a personal and a human way. >> they feel victimized by the federal government. >> they feel like they're attacked or even persecuted for being black men and they believe that donald trump understands their plight more than harris does. that this challenges economic challenge, this social challenge is racial challenge. they see more in trump's language and his willingness to fight and beat the system. they see more in themselves in that fight than they do in harris because they
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see her as representing voters who maybe they don't work. maybe there's a different gender, but it's not who they are. it's the same thing with union membership, with the rank and file? absolutely. are moving towards trump at the same moment that the leadership overwhelmingly maybe 90% endorsing harris and among latino vote should have that schism as well, where it's not what he says about illegal. because if you here legally, you agree with what thomas trump is saying. >> i know this is blowing people's minds right now. >> but i want to emphasize that this looks to me just like hillary clinton's campaign in 2016, where voters woke up the next day to a trump presidency harris's miscalculated. she's miscalibrated. and it's causing damage to her campaign so we're three weeks out from election day early voting started in some places, it's about to start and others. is their time
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to recalibrate for harris, in your opinion the best example is when asked, does she have any differences with joe biden? >> she says, now the first thing should have said she should have said is on the border. i do disagree. i do think that we've made some mistakes. and here's how we're going to correct them. but she's not willing to do that. hillary clinton played it safe in the last 28 days of the election not engaging with the press, not engaging with voters. and harris is doing exactly back to the same thing. and it's going to have the same impact if she doesn't change that strategy. >> and my other thought here is just we talk a lot about persuadable voters, people that still could go back or forth. some theories of the case are there really aren't many of those anymore. it's about turning out your voters at this point. but because she is in this unique position, harris being still so fresh in this race because of this wild campaign season, we've had
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its, it seems as if she's still defining herself to people and trump as we just saw in that clip, i played with it, alayna played leading in here is still desperately trying to define her as well i'm plugged for better or worse he's speaking what he truly believes for better or worse and some voters undecided voters who turned off to that because they're turned off to that rhetoric. >> but he he's actually speaking. i say this as clearly as i can he's using language on prices and on immigration that the public responds to. it's not insane. it actually is a majority of americans and the harris campaign so disagrees with it. so disagrees with the strategy and the policies that they are miscalibrated to how to win them over. and one last point, it really isn't the undecided right now, except them. those people at three or 4% probably won't decide they were probably stay home or they'll, they'll vote for a third party
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or write someone in the key now is turning out your partisans. she has the most incredible intense support among young women, 18 to 30. but trump's vote overall is well determined to vote. they will stand in line. they will do whatever it takes and even in that intensity at this moment, he's got a very, very slight advantage and just before i let you go, i do want to touch on something that continues to bear out and a lot of this polling. >> and i'm i would imagine you'll tell me and focus group as well, but this gender gap that we keep seeing show up again and again and again what are your thoughts on that and give us some nuance around it beyond just there's a gender gap that is the question of this campaign that's going to be what historians focus on. she has driven female vote too. two incredible levels, and particularly younger women. trump has done the same for
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older men so you have this conflict and it is not just about issues, it really is about attributes, how trump presents himself and harris presents herself. she is a role model for younger women. trump is saying, and almost screening exactly what older men fields. so this is going to be a problem. here's the issue i'm afraid we're not know who won this election on election night, and we're not going to hold the next night and we're not going to know even the night after that cnn and organizations like yours need to start now communicating to the american people exactly how they're going to cover that campaign. if we don't know for days, because in the end arizona, nevada, georgia, north carolina, pennsylvania, michigan, wisconsin, those are the states that make up the election for those states. probably won't have the votes counted for days and the level of anger and division this country is so high that we need to figure out how to deal with it. now, before the election
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happens, yeah, it's a good point. i just talked to the pennsylvania governor, josh shapiro last hour and asked him about that very question. >> and i asked him about being prepared for disinformation campaigns and lies, and then just the anger that i think you're probably seeing in a lot of people who are, who are deeply frustrated and angry start dressing it now before it's too late. all right. frank luntz. thank you so much. we really appreciate it. >> thank you. appreciate it, too. >> we are following breaking news out of the middle east, at least four israeli soldiers killed after a drone attack from hezbollah hit an army we're going to take you live to israel when we come back week and asked questions scenes like, what does a comedy show doing on cnn. that's too much but i want donald know, can you slice that my god, news for you. >> saturday at nine on cnn
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it as very difficult situation more than 60 casualties. they said evacuated eight different hospitals by ambulance and by helicopter. but just you have to stress here that this base is 40 miles from the border with lebanon that's a long way. it's closer to here in tel aviv than it is to the actual fighting at the warfront. so this is very significant and it absolutely does seem to be perhaps the bloodiest incident targeting and hitting ivf forces away from the front line since october the seventh last year, the idf chief spokesman has been to the site tonight describing what has happened and his described that hezbollah managed to get a drone into the base that it came across the northern border from lebanon around about 7:00 p.m. he said the situation is now under idf control, but what
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he describes as a scenario that requires investigation i'm reveals that they've come up short on defenses and he says the defenses need improving to their families all of the soldiers at the base were instructed to call home and update their families that they are okay. >> i'm not luminol limit. >> we are managing the incident colonial about when we will learn from an investigative and stuff, how a uav entered without an alert at the base base, a building where she was trapped uavs. the threat we are dealing with a haunted since the beginning of the war we need an improvement to our defense, finished up hezbollah over recent days has been threatening to target basis and collections of israeli troops away from the border. >> this this is something that has been threatening to do now, after this strike tonight they claimed that this was the act of a suicide drone. and
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hezbollah describes a scenario where they appear to have traded, cheated, or full the defense, the air defense systems here in israel, they fired, they say lots of rockets, dozens of rockets into northern israel. and then after that with the intention they say of confusing the air defense systems and then send a squadron of suicide drones target the base. now that may be an overstatement of what they did, but it clearly shows that hezbollah has been trying to find over recent weeks away he to get around the air defense systems here, which until now has been pretty effective on friday a hezbollah drone managed to get within a few miles of tel aviv and hit a nursing home not far away. and that was after intercept efforts. so hezbollah seems to be refining their tactics here. as you heard from the idf spokesman, there they absolutely need to improve.
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this is a very, very deadly and bloody day for the idf today. >> it certainly is. i also want to ask you about this other major development, the u.s. now saying it's going to sit an advanced anti-missile system that israel along with about 100 us troops to operate it. how significant is that >> this system the thaad the, the terminal high altitude area defense missile system is designed to intercept ballistic missiles and ballistic missiles that iran fired at israel two weeks ago, 100, more than 180 on them some of them got through to bases and other sites in israel, military bases. so with this thad system, it should give israel more protection if iran strikes them again with ballistic missile sounds the houthis in yemen hezbollah to the north and lebanon have also been firing ballistic missiles here.
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but this is a comprehensive system and 100 troops is about what is normally sent with one of these weapons system and it's a comprehensive system that should provide more or less blanket coverage across the whole country and will supplement what israel's doing already. but i think what it tells us is that the united states and israel recognize that this perhaps for tat exchange of missiles with iran could escalate from here and israel needs more protection to withstand if that's the case certainly. >> all right. nic robertson, what's really important reporting for us tonight from tel aviv. thank you so much for that still ahead in the cnn newsroom, we are talking with wisconsin democratic governor tony evers about vice president harris's a full-court press in crucial blue states, like his. and if she can pull away from former president trump
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over 40, i call it the daily routine newsnight with abby
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phillip weeknights at ten eastern on cnn closed captioning brought to you by mesobook.com if you or a loved one have mesothelial not we'll send you a free book to answer questions you may have called now and will come to you 808 to 14000 going all in on the blue wall states taking her campaign to wisconsin, pennsylvania, and michigan over the next several days it's, but it's not just harris and her running mate. >> this week, the democratic governors have all three states will launch a bus tour with stops in all of those states to try and get out the vote joining us. now, one of those governors, democrat tony evers of wisconsin, governor, thanks so much for being here it's lot, jessica, thanks for the invitation. yeah. we're happy to have you look. we've reached the point with three weeks out now, it is about getting out the vote. i know that's what you all are going to be trying to do on your bus tour? i want to talk about wisconsin for a second though, and focus in on that. how do you feel about the
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ground game, about what you're seeing and talking with people all around your state right now? >> that's a great question. i am so pleased with the results so far. obviously, polling his polling, but i get around to state every, just about every day and the energy and the people are engaged in this race. like i've never seen before. so, you know, on the ground, i think it's good obviously were purple state then we are going to continue being a purple state. but as far as the energy, whether i'm in a campus or on those smallest town are there were wisconsin i i'm very, very pleased where we're at at this point in time. we've got a lot of help. we've got about 55th the offices all across the state. they're seeing the same thing that i'm seeing and yet these polls continue to show these, this really tight race especially in these
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battleground states some democrats this week have expressed public concern that her momentum has stalled. >> there are worries voters still don't know enough about her polling showing she hasn't been able to fully separate herself from the biden administer striation and president biden what are you concerned about this? >> and what can she do in the next three weeks to change that well, i'm not concerned because as i said before, we're a purple state. it's going to be close regardless. no matter what happens between now and november 5. so it's going to be close, but i i you know, i expect that she'll be here. i know she's going to be hearing this week yet and obviously tim walz is going to be here so just being here is extraordinary ordinary. been every event that she's had here in wisconsin. alex is extraordinary in just a few weeks ago in ripon, the birthplace other republican party, great crowd, good conversation with congresswoman
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cheney and so i feel good about where we're at, but i think people because expectations for the blue wall states, if they thought it was going to be a ten point lead there, they're wrong. we are a purple state, donald trump has support here. i believe very strongly that we're going to win here in wisconsin. >> there. look, we're now looking three days, three weeks out to this so this election, and you're laying out so eloquently why it is so tight do you think that there's a good chance we may not know who the president is that on election night, because it may just be too tight and a variety of places. i'm curious in wisconsin let's an as the governor what you're doing to make sure that that that process can play out freely and fairly as it needs to. and also, if you can if there's a plan in place to combat any disinformation that starts to be spreader conspiracy theories as we wait to get those results
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well, certainly our me and the folks that work with me will be on top of so making sure that people understand what's true in one isn't true with an obviously there's a lot of that going around but at the end of the day, it is about it is about the yes the folks at the local level who count, count the votes and send them into madison to the elections commission. >> i feel confident that in nurse in their work it's confident last time, unfortunately, the trump administration decided or trump of people decided that they want to harass people and and take us to court and all that. but at the end of the day, nothing worked because it was a good election, obviously in milwaukee, there are biggest state or big city in the state, and there it takes longer to count ballots. we tried to get legislation done in the last go around in the woods this lecture to allow them to at least process those mail in the
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process means just taking them out of the envelope. but we weren't be able to get there republicans meet behind that. so it takes a while to count those, those mail ballots and the ones that come in late and so we feel very good about the system and we were going to be having people out there watching the polls, making sure that people don't get too close to the voters, too close to harassing people. but at the end of the day the people that work in wisconsin, the elections, there all heroes, they took too much crap, excuse me for last time around and i believe in the good the work of that they're republicans or democrats or independents, it doesn't matter. they believe that they're doing the right thing. i agree with them they are public servants. >> wisconsin governor attorney tony evers. thank you very much for your time. we appreciate david take care. >> bye-bye coming up for the second time in a week. >> president biden is getting a
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projects to help people in states like florida and helped make their power grids stronger. more than 800,000 people still don't have power after milton made landfall wednesday night. cnn's brian todd has more now from st. petersburg president biden got an aerial and ground tour of the hardest hit areas of st. pete beach and the areas near here today. and this was kind of of a bipartisan tour by nature several prominent republican officials touring the area with the president and speaking after the president and including st. pete beach mayor adrian patrol kathleen peters, the republican chair of pinellas county. both of whom republicans also accompanying the president was congresswoman anna paulina luna, a staunch republican and republican senate sure. rick scott. so the president really trying to strike that by partisan tone as a response to the hurricane because it kind of playing off the idea that some people here playing politics or kamala harris and republican governor ron desantis, both accusing
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each other of playing politics with the response. but the president himself kind of trying to stay away from that. fred hey, striking that by partisan tone while he was here saying both democrats and republicans are coming together to gather themselves in to help this area respond to the hurricane. the president also kind of striking a personal tone talking about how his own homes were damaged in major storms and talking about the damage that was suffered here, thankfully, the storm's impact was not as cataclysmic as we predicted but in tapa to before, just keeps seek, you see him, getting, worse and you know, but for some individuals, it was cataclysmic all those folks who lost their homes but more importantly no social lost their lives, lost family members lost all her personal belongings entire neighborhoods were flooded and millions millions are without power we should also note that president biden was scheduled to be
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overseas at this very moment, the white house had scheduled a trip for the president to go to germany and angola, which would have been the president's first and only trip to the continent of africa while he was president that trip had to be postponed. >> it was postponed on the eve of the day that hurricane milton hit this area. but president biden says, he is still determined to make a trip to africa before he leaves office. brian todd, cnn, st. pete beach, florida alright, our thanks to brian there for that. i had elon musk hopes today's big achievement means were one step closer to sunday, sending people to mars. >> how spacex is making history and giving the phrase stick the landing a whole new meaning you're in the cnn newsroom black people better or worse, a lot of people came away from that. they get when it's my turn to talk tv on the edge, moments that shaped our culture tonight at nine on cnn america,
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to be really happy you have this on
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saturday at nine on cnn closed captioning brought to you by meso mesobook.com if you or a loved one have mesothelial month, we'll send you a free book to answer questions you may have call now and we'll come to you 808 to 14000 the most powerful rocket ever built that rocket booster pushed a starship up into orbit there and a lot of cheering with no proof that starship circled most of the globe. it splashdown in the indian ocean as planned. but the real technological wizardry was it the booster came back to the launch site, watched how the chopsticks reach out to catch it we can see those chants
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the rocket is key to elon musk's dream i'm sending people back to the moon and mars and us people for d, excited about it a new episode of tv on the edge takes you through the devastating aftermath of hurricane katrina in new orleans. >> after the floodwaters poured in, survivors, obviously needed help, but many of them felt abandoned and ignored by the federal government all the years as being college, all the books that i've read, the greatest education ever had or
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what it means to be black in america happened on august 29, 2005? >> hundreds most likely thousands are dead there's no question if this had happened in a white suburb i, assume it would have been a very different story. it makes you wonder whether or not you lived in a government that was operating on your behalf it made you wonder whether or not you were in america during a live telephone for hurricane relief. kanye west lashed out at the end, president bush, creating a spark that laid the groundwork for the black lives matter movement, seen entertainment reporter lisa respers, france is joining us now. >> elisa, tell us more about that moment and how pivotal it was. >> jessica that moment was incredible because here's kanye west standing with mike myers, who of course has a comedic actor. so people i think expected it to be like a light funny moment. but kanye west went completely off script and
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he says george bush does not care about black people. it was a shocking moment i mean, i feel like america felt like mike myers face looked at that time. he just looked like, wow, that really just happened and then they go to chris tucker who has to come out of it and just keep the whole telethon rolling along again. it was such a shocking moment, but it was an incredible moment in a very important moment for the, the conversation around katrina. people had seen the horrendous footage like we're looking at right there of people just trying to survive. and so by kanye west saying what he said, i say in the episode that it felt like he said said the quiet part out loud. >> this whole series is about these moments on, in television that really have shaped our society our lives, to that end. how did the events of that day help lay the groundwork for the black lives matter movement yeah, because by taking on the president of the united states arguably, an incredibly
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powerful person in by saying this and being critical of him, it laid the groundwork for people feeling more comfortable to speak out against the treatment of black and brown people in this country because people focus on him saying george bush doesn't care about black people but he also was part of what he had to say was about how the media was treating black people versus white people. >> he was saying it made him upset to see that they treated it as black people were out here looting and causing destruction, but white people were out there looking for food. and so it laid the foundation for people to feel like, you know what we should it'd be protesting these things. we should be talking about these things. and it's ironic, jessica, when you think about it, because years later, kanye west caused so much controversy by wearing a white lives matter shirt and people were so upset, but the kanye of 19 years ago is a very different kanye from who we see today. >> all right, lisa respers, france. thank you so much for that. we really appreciate it. be sure to tune in to a new episode of tv on the edge,
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moments that shaped our culture at airs tonight, at 9:00 p.m. on cnn some democrats are worried, vice president harris is momentum has plateaued. i just talked to a key harris surrogate pennsylvania governor josh shapiro. tell me here. if you'll hear what he told me about that, that's next pizza everyday, plus unlimited topics. >> but does the budget even exist for that ethan, why are we not talking about the fact that my opponent has coatings >> it didn't my cola guard is for people 45 plus at average risk, not high risk, false positive and negative results may occur greene for colon cancer in your home, your way your provider for the guard. >> some people just know they can save hundreds on car insurance by checking all state first like you know to check your schools saying first before saying
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retirement savings lawyer helps you choose the right amounts without over or under invested across all your benefits and savings options so you can feel confident in your financial choices a really know how to put two and two together. >> oh, yeah. >> well-planned, well invested, well protected 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 sheer his 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 advisor, donald trump, will cause a lot of damage, the only thing he cares about is
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donald trump, an the nation's four former highest ranking military officer. >> we don't take an oath to a king or queen, or a tyrant, or a dictator. and 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. >> and kamala harris and i approve this message at verizon. >> every phone can be the new iphone 16 pro with apple intelligence. >> wow, homes are going to be flying to horizon at&t, verizon, do and existing customers can get iphone 16 pro and a new ipad all on us only on verizon it's got, it's just perfect for fall, right? yeah. >> feature alone now to strengthen routes all winter prepared alone next spring how do you know all this says it right there on the back. >> yes, it does. zel
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in cripple creek, colorado. >> and this is cnn
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>> i'm jessica dean in new york. we are 23 days away from election day in america and both candidates are on the trail right now, donald trump is speaking in arizona. the new york times deanna poll also showing a narrow five point lead for the former president in that state. vice president kamala harris, just wrapping up a visit to battleground, north carolina. she's going to visit pennsylvania tomorrow a state where she holds it's a very small lead, but there is still no clear leader. it's an extremely tight race seen as latest national poll of polls showing no clear leader with 50% of likely voters supporting harris and 47% supporting trump. we start tonight with cnn's alayna train. she is live in arizona where the former president wrapped up his remarks. a few minutes ago and alayna, we saw him again leaning into his closing argument of immigration using some incredibly dark rhetoric. >> that's exactly right. jessica, he really