tv CNN News Central CNN October 16, 2024 5:00am-6:00am PDT
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at night, burglarizing very, very wealthy homes and people bull with thousands of dollars of things. so this, this criminal behavior now they've been in there for 35 years, but it is a life sentence without parole. kim core dashing has gone to the prison gascon is going to hold a press conference today. the momentum documentary, i mean, we're all talking about it at work right? yeah. evidence and also rehabilitation, but many others are going to say now it's going to start, i'm rehabilitated to why can i get out that is the knock-on effect. >> we will see what happens with this case. there was a lot of interests in it afternoon casarez always a pleasure. thank you so much a new hour of cnn, new central starts right now >> kamala harris unveiled a new speech on patriotism. donald
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trump clarifies who he means by the enemy from within, and it's exactly who was republican allies have been trying to spin that he was not talking about suspicious and intimidating text messages to college students. discouraging them from voting and after six long years away, the victoria's secret fashion show makes a return to the runway. this is me now not looking. i'm john berman with my eyes closed along with sara sidner and kate baldwin and this is cnn news central three weeks thinks of this campaign. >> there's only one certainty if you blink, you will miss something. town hall meetings, combative sit downs over economic policy, defensive pushback over appealing to black men voters, and record breaking early vote turnout in a battleground state that was
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just yesterday. today for kamala harris, a big event in battleground, pennsylvania with a ton of republicans supporting her, her team, dubbing it a push for patriotism and also going where she's never gone before. a sit down interview with fox news. donald trump is headed to another town hall this time directed at latino voters. he's also clarifying, as john was just talking about who he really considers the enemy from within which he says he'd consider using the military against joining us right now, cnn political director david chalian. so david, where do we even be once david pops up, where do we even begin david harris harris teaming up with republicans in pennsylvania, trump reaching out to latino voters with a univision town hall what do these moves speak to in your mind in terms of where the campaigns are focused, or maybe what they think they need from voters. >> yeah, that's it, kate, right? it's like their to-do list are being played out in front of us we're not seeing
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these two candidates just sort of kriss crisscrossed battleground states with big generic rallies across in this final push here, we're actually seeing them address all the potential vulnerabilities that they have day in and day out. in this very targeted segmented audiences kind of approach and you saw yesterday trump going and talking to a town hall full of female voters, knowing that he has to shore up female support. you saw kamala harris talking to charlamagne, tha god and dealing with black voters. and specifically black men today. also, as you noted, when kamala harris goes to bucks county, pennsylvania it's one of those four collar counties that we talk about the border philadelphia, those philly suburbs that are so critical for especially democratic candidates, that is, where they need to run up the vote if they are going to win the commonwealth of pennsylvania. she's going there to where george washington crossed the delaware to make this it's argument about country over
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party and patriotism like you say, this on the heels of what donald trump was still referring to january 6 yesterday as a day of peace and love. she'll be joined by adam kinzinger and other republicans. it's sort of republican day for kamala harris. she is very much today focused on bringing over some votes twitter's whether independent or republican leaning independent trump resistant republicans into the fold. and the harris campaign sees that as a critical component of what they need to get across the finish line on election day and then as i said, if you blink, you'll miss something with how fast and furious everything moves in this campaign. so i want your takeaways on what we saw just yesterday. donald trump's town hall with women with a woman with women in georgia, abortion was a big topic. many other issues came up as well kamala harris sitting down with radio host charlamagne tha god in detroit. what are the big takeaways that you see that people should remember today
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well, first of all the harris campaign as you know, kate is extraordinarily focused on a daily contrast with trump you know, they had not been putting out david plouffe, the senior adviser from the obama days, who's now responsible for building the strategy to get to 270 electoral votes. >> but he did a couple of interviews with pod save america and a new york magazine certainly and you can hear where they are turning their attention, which is they want to draw a contrast with trump every day it's why harris wanted that second debate that she's not getting with him so badly in all her answers to charlemagne tha god. yes. she was working the african american vote and targeting black men. but it almost every answer she said and now let's compare it to where trump is. and so having them out and about daily is something that they welcome in terms of trying to draw the contrast and they are seizing on his whatever headline he makes in the day, right? so whether its enemy from within his world, discuss
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they then season on that and drive that home in their daily message. she's trying to be far more responsive and aggressive in going after her opponent on a daily basis. >> real quick. i mean, we can say both campaigns are going to have plenty of money to finish out these three weeks. but the fundraising numbers that have come in are really eye-popping from the big numbers that billionaires are putting up to support donald trump that we've just learned to also the joint fundraising numbers that we've seen between the harris campaign and the democratic party. it is eye-popping. david yeah, there's no doubt about it. would be the most expensive campaign. it's proving to be it's also just fascinating to see the, civic billionaires, right? whether it's miriam adelson the casino magnate pouring in $100 million into the effort to get donald trump elected elon musk, who had promised 45 million a month in
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trump allied groups to fund. he's not quite there yet, but he is up to 70 5 million, nothing to sneeze at dequeue line of $49 million into these are individual wealthy americans who are clearly putting it online. and we see, you mentioned the joint fundraising committee for harris. she's not without her rich friends to laurene powell jobs. melinda french gates, these are people who have maxed out in the million dollar range under the rules of the joint fundraising committee, more contributing directly to harrison, the dnc, they're victory fund rather than the unlimited contributions you can give to the super pacs outside ally groups campaign finance reform, nobody is going to be short are learning to make their argument through exactly. >> yeah. it's great to see you, david. thank you, sir. >> and now to some of those arguments, donald trump and kamala harris taking questions on their plans for the economy. kamala harris took questions from listeners during her audio town hall with charlemagne tha god, while i'm clash with
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bloomberg, editor in chief over trump's promise of tariffs during an economic forum in chicago. take a listen why are we sending money to other countries? >> will we definitely need in our own country for homeless housing resources for whatever that is it's my determining factor. if i vote were common law or not. >> so what what do you say to that we can do it all and we do so. >> first of all, i maintain very strongly america should never pull ourselves away from our responsibility as a world leader and that is in the best interest of our national security in each one of us as americans. and our standing in the world that being said, we also have an obligation to american citizens. obviously, and people who are here to meet their everyday needs and challenges, which is why, for example, we have done the work
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in the last four years of bringing down the cost of prescription medications you have america at the moment, tests free trillion dollars worth of imports. you're going to add tariffs to every single one of them that is going to push up the costs for all those people who want to buy foreign goods now, what's glad? >> simple mathematics. president trump, that is, yeah, it is, but not the way you've figured i was always very good at mathematics. >> let me tell you, you're saying 3 trillion companies and donors. and they don't have to pay. and the higher the tariff the more likely it is to have them come into the client the tariff, the more you're going to put on on the value of that piece, those goods, the higher people are going to pay in shops already the higher the tariff, the more likely it is that the company will come into the united states and build a factory in the united states or doesn't have to pay the tariff the arguments joining me now to discuss former dnc vice chair in new york assembly men michael blake and conservative radio host shelly winter. thank you both for being here. the economy is the number one
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issue. after poll, after poll, it's great to have you here for let's to you michel, what did you make of what you heard from both kamala harris and donald trump on some of the economic questions asked there, you have someone who is actually ready to be president and someone who doesn't know how to count. so you have in vice president harris laying out a very clear proposal that would help businesses help people, help of cost of living particularly you look at going from $5,000, $50,000, that's a game changer for small business versus donald trump, who in his continue record of being bankrupt and not knowing what to do is actually trying to tell americans that tariffs will not lead to higher costs the fundamental concern that people have right now is cost of living. he is saying it out of his mouth. believe him and what he is saying, he has no plan, he has no vision and you're just listening and watching and display shelly, what did you make of the comments there particularly because i know your listeners? >> listen to you from the conservative mindset. what did
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you make of that radio in atlanta understood what he meant because they can't do math unlike my democrat friends the point is tariffs are used as a tool and a tool, as he said, the tool is to bring american manufacturing back to american american to america. >> so that's what the tariff is used for. the tariff is almost used as that threat is if you continue to manufacture overseas, which past us jobs, then we're going to place a tariff on your products and services. we want you to bring that manufacturing home. what you did do very i don't know if it's done on purpose or was done for time, what was interesting is you cut off the crowds response that was a room full of business people that wasn't just a town hall of regular citizens and they clap at donald trump's answer because as business people they understood what the point was
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that was being made. but now let's go over to vice president harris is non-answer to a very specific question no, you cannot do everything. you cannot take care of american citizens who are living under bridges, veteran so we're living under bridges families who are homeless, you cannot take care of them and continue to send hundreds of billions of dollars to ukraine, to israel, were getting ready to put boots on the ground in israel, 100 boots on the ground in israel too taiwan. and all these places around the world and take care of american citizens and give reparations and gave $50,000 to every business that wants it. and now you went from a $25,000 housing credit tax credit to last night, she told charlamagne tha god, it's going to be $25,000 down payment assistance. so right there i've got to ask, what is it? am i getting 25 stacks for us? assistance or am i getting a $25,000 tax credit? what is it and it's par for the course for this campaign, throw
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everything out, say what needs to be said, and hopefully it sticks. and apparently none of it is sticking and to be fair, during that economic forum, the same thing was said of donald trump by the editor in chief of bloomberg. >> i want to move on. to what donald trump has said about an issue near and dear to both of your hearts. the issue of black americans and otieno voters. kamala harris has been doing interviews on black media trump though is, is overperforming in polling with both groups compared to pass republicans. here is what he said when he was campaigning in pennsylvania any african-american or hispanic. >> and you know how well i'm doing there. that votes for kamala you got to have you because they they are really screwing you they are really scared it. is kamala for the record, but he is denigrating voters from making a choice that he does not like. shelley to. what does he achieved with
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us why wait, first of all, how's he denigrating voters? he's saying that they are being for lack of a better word, screws advantage of there being taken advantage of they are paying higher pricing. there, they are working class, the ones that he's talking about working class, lower middle-class. they're paying more for food, they're paying more for gas and they've been taken van a job, but he also 30 years, they voted he also said that they that they had to have their head examined. that's that is not something that is a compliment, obama just told me the same thing. obama just told me the same thing. i'm not women telling me i'm not really he inferred him. he implied them. he certainly did even threatened us with your lucky michelle's not here. i mean, come on. let's not make things up. let's be honest here, and let's really be clear what's being said. if you're an african american man, i look, let me boil this
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election down in the african-american community to a very simple i'll reference the great malcolm max. this race is between house african americans and field african americans and a field african americans going for donald trump i'm talking about your man who i'm talking about your men who build your man, who put things together. you're men who work with their hands. you men who two things, not the man who pushed paper on the men are connected to power and want to continue to be connected to power who are professionals who work in white-collar jobs. is that what i'm hearing from you are no i'm not selling what i'm doing the field. >> just trying to understand that part but i'm sorry. i understand. we have signed i'm just trying to stay in one spitting talking points right now. are you are you the house the field? still numerator to referring to? i don't want to make sure your question was about denigrating black people that literally was your question you haven't
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republican right? >> that he was talking right now about it. you literally just say that black men, you just you actually just say this is an election about house or field. this is the nonsense that we are listening to right now by those that are supporting donald trump. what is that that is actually what you just there's only clearly you must be, you must be on your own. i'm not sure what kind of radio show you had that you can listen you one thing you actually just said for trump understand that you sound no, sir and early and so let's actually talk about the substance of your question the substance of the question is around denigrating. i said is very substance of the question was denigrating black and latino communities sir. >> sir. sir the substance of michael claim is my question is michael and we thank you that so the point here, russia and that was my brother around
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denigrating black and latino communities let me answer the question. >> the conceded let me answer the question that concerning part let me ask you the question. shelly, you made it you made the point saying that you believe that when i'm making ma'am sara the hour, the point i'm making is this the man who get up, the men who get up every day and make things happen with their hands, they build things they're plumbers, electricians, they're working for amazon. >> these men who coaching seven and under football, not because their son or daughter plays, but because they want to keep rub this off and then, voluntarily at time, these men these men are going for trump. these men and i used an analogy, made famous by the great malcolm x. so if you're saying that i'm denigrating anybody then you must assume that he was denigrating somebody. so don't even throw that word out there again. >> michael heard the filibuster. so the
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point yesterday i answered your question when vice president harris was in detroit with charlamagne tha god, we're talking about detroit versus everybody. so the reference that was just made he's essentially communicating that the people in detroit and milwaukee and philly that are doing work manufacturing jobs, putting him for their communities are going to vote for donald trump on man who has no policy, no support, who call for the death penalty on black men and has repeatedly been against us. so let's be abundantly clear. you have a choice you can follow the rhetoric of someone who is literally calling you a house or field, black man. or you can follow the black woman who was a da, an ag, a united states senator, a vice president, and hbcu alum, a sorority sister, who was actually helping black people this is the decision you have in 20 days. follow people
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like sally, how is she saying this rhetoric? we've heard people we could learn. house the winter you've probably view. >> we really appreciate that. thank you, sir. i appreciate it that so the reality is this, you have a scenario right now where you have on one side a black woman who is saying, how do we help our communities to your earlier question, sara, around, how can you do both on one side, you have vice president harris, who is articulating how we can help domestically and abroad donald trump sent covid, tests to help putin. while you're black families house or field, referring to a shelley's are dying dying words going that's donald trump's policy information you know, it's misinformation. >> we think hear you're going to leave this here. michael blake shelly winter. thank you. correct.
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>> misinformation if i look good for joining, you >> thank you very much, sara, for that discussion this morning, 81 people still unaccounted for after hurricane helene devastated parts of north carolina and warning do not vote or you could go to prison. the new threatening text messages sent to voters in a key battleground state and alleged plot to skip air them away from the ballot box. and if share is there, it must be big. the victoria's secret fashion show back after a six year hiatus this i mean, if i could turn back time before election day, vice president harris basis it takes the pressing questions lie. >> anderson cooper moderates a cnn presidential town hall
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kamala harris next wednesday at nine eastern on cnn when you have kids, you get opinion. >> i'd have them in bed by eight under 65 degrees outside. >> they need a coat. >> i can't turn off those comments but i can turn off comments on my teen's tiktok videos comment settings on tiktok you're leaving me for a turbotax expert seeing it, adam turbotax will be your pride's turbotax live expert and we'll beat the price you pay your pro last tax season. high it's that time of year again the medicare annual enrollment period, you might be thinking, why should i care? well, if you're 65 or older or on medicare, you should because the annual enrollment period, which is right now, is when you can change your medicare plan. and the annual enrollment period and december 7. >> so ask yourself, do you have the coverage you are you
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san francisco's leadership is failing us. that's why mark farrell is endorsing prop d. because we need to tackle our drug and homelessness crisis just like mark did as our interim mayor. mark farrell endorsing prop d, to bring the changes we need for the city we love. san francisco's leadership is failing us. that's why mark farrell is endorsing prop d. because we need to tackle our drug and homelessness crisis just like mark did as our interim mayor. mark farrell endorsing prop d, to bring the changes we need for the city we love.
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are ringing, get your business ready for business with seo experts on fiverr every weekday morning. here are the five things you need to know to start your day get the news, you need about this for an earnings call headline in five minutes or less cnn's five things with kate bolduan streaming weekdays on cnn.com, and max new this morning, 81 people in north carolina's still unaccounted for nearly three weeks after hurricane helene ripped through that state, thousands of people without power this morning still cnn's ryan young is here with the very latest ryan yeah, john, just that numbers alone are still shocking. >> you're talking about three weeks later the 81 people still unaccounted for but when you think about the death toll of 117 people, there are so many folks in north carolina who are still dealing with the effects of the storm, just talking back and forth with people that we know, even people who work in the crew. some folks are just getting water back there's 13,000 people without power and the surveys continue their 1501st responders still in the
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area trying to help people recover. and all this, the governor says is just the beginning of this massive recovery effort. take a listen. >> so getting again into the fall season into the north carolina mountains. so we're working to make sure that people have likened if fuel is working to change the supply chain, to make sure that we are dealing with those issues as well. really hard when she lost your home and some people are staying with relatives some people are staying in hotels false that fema has provided for them but many of them are just trying to figure out what their next move yeah. >> john trying to figure out what's next. $99 million of assistance has already going out. but when you think about what the governor was indicating there, you're talking about in the mountains already cold. it's getting cold here in atlanta, so you can only imagine what it's like
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in that cold area. and then on top of the impact that those folks in north carolina are experiencing, then you have the real concerns of where they can get water and power back onto several different areas. let's not forget our friends to the south are dealing with hurricane milton in tampa there have been shortages when it comes to power and gas. and so they're hoping to get more gas into the tampa bay area in the next 24 hours. so but this recovery effort continues and john, unless you have family who's impacted by this, a lot of times, these updates are slow when you think about there of massive amounts of areas that are still without power, where people are just hoping that the supply chain gets back up. so that infrastructure improvements can we made this double hit of these two hurricanes back-to-back, really have stressed a lot of people, john question, there is still so much need, ryan young. >> thank you so much for that report his morning, a new federal investigation is underway into the scary close calls at some of the nation busiest airports
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crosby was a young man to come into you. colorado is pretty special and you know, it's going to be a tough game. >> one, boston cons for seoul, many boston fan savers, ing-wen's ruins have lance tonight is six-thirty on tnt new this morning, federal regulators are launching a new probe and two near collisions at 45 of the busiest airports in the country. >> officials say the audit will drill down on risks at each airport, including identifying potential gaps and procedure because as well as recommendations to improve safety, cnn aviation correspondent pete muntean has more on this. you are also a pilot. you are well aware of all the things that can cause these problems, but give us some sense of this because that number sounds like a lot yes this is significant because it shows that this industry-wide issue really is not been licked just yet, the faa says it will audit these 45 busiest airports in the u.s. >> for the potential of these near collisions on runways, they're known officially as
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runway incursions, been reporting on it since the start of last year and the headlines have really been urgent coast to coast. the catalyst at new york's jfk in january 2023, an american airlines flight bound for london taxi in front of a delta flight that was already accelerating for takeoff. nobody hurt in that incident. but investigators say the pilots of the american airlines flight or distracted by paperwork, essentially got lost on the ground. but the list really goes on here. austin, boston, burbank reagan national airport outside dc in june. and the most recent incident just last month in nashville, the tires of an alaska airlines flight that was taking off blew out when the pilots had to slam on the brakes when a southwest airlines flight taxied out in front of them now, investigators say that they're still doing interviews in that case. the faa says it's audit here, will really drill down on the risks that are baked in at each airport. remember, might not always be pilots who are entirely at fault here, could be something a bit more structural and the faa wants to know there are gaps in procedures are issues with equipment. maybe there's a
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process at the airport that's causing problems. investigators have been concerned not only about the design of some airports, but also the lack of early warning technology. 35 airports have technology that alerts air traffic controllers of these impending collisions. but remember there are about 500 airports in the u.s with commercial service. >> the ntsb has said that technology saved the day and that jfk collision i talked about earlier. >> and ntsb chair jd jennifer homendy is told me she wants to see it at more airports. of course, a lot of eyes here on this new audit, sara and the faa says it will be finished sometime next year. a lot of people looking forward to this. >> yeah, it seems like that technology would be really important. it's only and 35 airports when you've got hundreds of airports across the country, pete muntean. thank you so much. great to have you this morning. john all right. >> new this morning, a federal investigation underway in a key battleground state after a city's mayor was caught wheeling a way, a ballot drop
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enrollment ends on december 7, so-called now humana, a more human way to health care morning, conspiracy theories are swirling over ballot drop boxes in battleground states in wisconsin, a years long fight over drop dropboxes has sparked a criminal investigation. >> cnn's sara murray went there to find out what is going on theory
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>> they are reliable and secure waiting a city council meeting just started on one side, we've gotten favor of the dropbox on the other side, we've got people who are skeptical about the dropbox they wanted to go away you're going the two side. is that the battle over whether ballot drop-box as they're safe, is playing out across the country. >> there's no one monitoring. hearing loss. >> i wisconsin tension is building after mayor doug diny put on a hard hat and wheeled away the city's dropbox this is a hot button item. agenda was changed last night, not proper point of order. what is your point of order by point of order is your out-of-order after diny, wield the dropbox away, the city clerk who administer elections reported it to local authorities. the state justice department is now investigating the city's mayor ballot drop-box security is an
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issue on which he campaign i am very embarrassed for our city. >> this is just one more example of the deep state, right at work and little wausau arguing about a box it's dumb. and its decadent. >> wisconsin has been battling over where you can return your ballot for years in 2020, they had drop boxes in 2022. they weren't allowed in 2024. the makeup of the state supreme court changed its more liberal and now drop boxes are back we want to get rid of fake drop boxes. >> there are fake i'm sara murray with cnn. should we do if i come around i brought it inside because it wasn't it was unsecured for all i know somebody could have grabbed did thrown in the river. >> now we would have a real crime on her hands from those who saying mean you might have done something illegal and moving the box absolutely not. >> know. >> have you you heard anything about all of these investigations that may be related to this. now, you heard
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anything do you are moving you know, there's a saying that dogs don't bark it park cars i've had to get attention here from time to time to upset the status quo. now that the dropbox is in us, it's secured to the ground, locked and emptied by officials a day haley drop boxes are fraudulent there for they get disrupt, they disappear, and then all of a sudden they show up it's fraudulent. >> drop boxes have become a magnet for misinformation the issue came up again during trump's rally in juneau, wisconsin so how did you end up on onstage at the trump rally really was just to call up from the president. >> i have something very important. i think you're going to want to hear in dodge county in this 2024 election, there are zero drop boxes for the election successfully discouraged some
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municipal clerks from using drop boxes but a handful remain in urge county despite his warnings if we have an area of the law which is constantly being subverted. >> we're going to find ways to what roadblocks in the way of individuals that are going to break the law. >> you're suggesting that, you know, the ballot boxes are constantly being subverted and there's just there is not proof to back that up. >> there is the appearance that that it is occurring, and we are making sure that is not going to happen. >> but you are not an election official. so why should your doubts about the election set the tone for how this whole county should vote because i have to investigate the crimes that happened. if they happened and my after they happen, they haven't been reported yet. well, we have election law violation that happens just about every time i'm around so when election laws violated, i have to investigate that in a county trump won by 30 points in 2020. schmidt says the local community is with him but i'm very well supported by our constituency here. do i answer to the rest of the country? no,
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i don't answer my voters here in touch coney and our thanks to sara murray for that report. this morning. the air of american political action committee and air american news, both based in the crucial battleground state of michigan, have decided to endorse no one for president. they announced their decision to withhold their votes, saying neither kamala harris nor donald trump deserve them with us now is osama siblani the editor-in-chief of the arab american news. thank you so much for being with us. we ask you this question. what do you think a na presidency? would mean for arab americans and muslim americans to america? >> and we do not believe that it means good. i we have been hearing from m would be we've been hearing from his campaign. we've been talking to them. they've been pocket to us and we have been hitting the former vice president rallies and all those of one, someone does that. immigrants poison american blood we are
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immigrants. >> we are a nation of immigrants how do you how do you vote for someone like this? how do you cast a vote for someone who doesn't see your, your vote and does not respect your presence between what a trump presidency and a harris presidency would be first, about a former president donald trump campaign. the same applies to kamala harris, the vice president. we have been trying to reach out. they have reached out and we've been talking to the campaign for the last probably four or five months before for the same campaign, actually, with president joe biden. and we did not see anything that, that brings to our attention the interests of our community. and what's happening overseas our homes, our friend's home, our families overseas, or be killed by american made bomb and we
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should, we should, we have been trying to say to them please stop this war for 12 months and 43,000, right now that in gaza, when 2,200 in lebanon, thousands have been injured, 100,000 and gaza and over 11,011 total destruction homes and property and every facet of life in gaza and now in lebanon. >> what are we going to vote for? who are we going to vote for? the two main candidates have been ignoring, our needs and therefore, we have decided, to ignore them, not to vote for that so by not endorsing, though, are you saying there is no difference between what a trump presidency and a harris presidency would be foreign policy, i think both of them are the same domestically in here, we have been trying to reach to kamala harris. >> let's remember one thing president joe biden, when he
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was running for president in 2020, we voted for him. he got almost 70% of our votes in this state. and we have given them all the support. and when his wife, jill biden showed up in here and and him and his vice president, a candidate that fine. a maga hat we supported them. we've interviewed kamala harris we've interviewed people for his campaign and they said we will have a seat around the table. we don't have a sit around the debit. we don't have a seat in the room. we don't have a seat in the building and the neighborhood in the city and the country. and therefore, why would we, and we voted for him because we would want hoping against donald trump now, are we going to vote for him again which is his vice president, also against donald trump. it doesn't work this way it is interesting because both the biden campaign and the harris campaign we're criticized by the right by donald trump and his allies are done with its
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allies for meeting with you, correct well the article two sides and also, we have been meeting with them. they were here last last last week, friday and saturday, and they had their convention or some kind of meetings here in downtown detroit let me let me tell you, mr. berman. first of all, we are american and anyone who create this a candidate for meeting with arab americans, they are not really, they don't understand what country we live in. we live in a country of nations of evergrande. and therefore, i don't understand why would they object to meet with arab-american? that is very disturbing osama siblani, we appreciate your discussion this morning. >> thanks so much for being with us. be well worker strike at boeing is now threatening. >> do have major ripple effects on the broader us economy, how supplies across all 50 states could soon feel the impact and
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victoria secret pulls out all the stops for its annual show. but when it came to one performance on journalists reacted this way, the models could have been naked and no one would have noticed before election day vice president harris basis voters and takes the pressing questions, lie. anderson cooper moderates a cnn presidential town hall, kamala harris, next wednesday at nine eastern on cnn i didn't have to spend my life trying to fight my carlin mine phone mean but early age he was just a matter of hogan would i could get. and how farro would go ram or callings to build trucks so when you find your call, nothing can stop you from answering days, get $4,000 cash allowance on the purchase of most 20-25 ram 1,500 trucks. don't miss ramp our day hurrian today feeling from a backed-up god
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and asked questions like, what is a comedy show doing on cnn that's too much i want donald. now, can you slice of all i got news for you saturday at nine on cnn this is cnn the world's news network made one journalist say the models could have been naked. >> everyone was watching, share but that wasn't true. >> we happens. so we're seeing this for the first time in six
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years. kate moss, gg, had the eid and tyra banks all took to the runway for the first time in a very long time for tyra banks, it has been 20 tea years. those are just a few of the ways that brand was looking to recast the show after its six year hiatus germany's biggest airline, lufthansa, was hit with a record $4 million fine for discriminating against jewish passengers. the department of transportation made the announcement on tuesday, which stems from an incident in may of 2020 22 the airline blocked more than 120 jewish passengers from boarding because of what they said was misbehavior by some of them it is the largest penalty ever issued by the federal agency for civil rights violations. we've done so tell cnn that they have, quote, fully cooperated with the dot authorities throughout its review process alright. police say nearly 100 people are dead in northern nigeria after a crash, tanker exploded tuesday night near locals who had gathered to retrieve the fuel,
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the death toll is expected to rise. authorities say the driver lost control and the tanker flipped into a drainage ditch and leaked fuel before blowing up and a florida couple who were warned about an approaching tornado during hurricane milton, track down the woman who they say saved them and their children. the st. lucie county coupled found the woman through facebook. they returned and reunited and greeted each other with a huge embrace. michelle west failed explains what it was like at the moment when the twister was approaching and branding clark reversed her car and yelled out for them to seek cover the tires were squealing and she was just taken off backwards, run into the house. >> i hear her screen get in your house and i'm like, oh, my god, this is bad. no sooner and then he shuts the door behind me. i got my kids and we're still standing in the middle of living room. and my house just started shaking. it was the craziest 15 seconds of my life truly
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up. what an ordeal the women say, they plan to stay in touch and we'll continue the special friendship over some barbecue. john all right. this morning, control of the house of representatives could come down to the state of new york, which is pretty interesting giving that new york is about the furthest thing from a swing state. but the house might swing here. cnn's annie grayer is here with the latest on this. good morning. >> morning yes. >> so new york might be a row. my vote blue in the presidential, but these races in long island, in westchester, in central new york really are going to be so competitive and going to be determined by a razor thin margin. it's, they're currently represented by republicans republican congressman mike lawler, anthony d'esposito, and marc molinaro. and these republicans flipped districts from democrats two years ago. they are trying to show that they're wins were not a fluke because
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they know national implications here, whoever wins these races is likely to determine who controls the house it's a representatives. next congress. and in my conversations with them when i went to their districts, they very much pitch themselves to me as moderates who were willing to work across the aisle and even create distance with their own party. congressman d'esposito said to me, he gets criticized for not being conservative enough and that's because these republicans are walking a very thin tight rope. they know that their districts are home to more registered democrats than republicans. their districts voted for president biden in 2020, but they also are part of the republican party. they support former president donald trump. they support how speaker mike johnson, who i'm told is coming to their districts in the coming weeks. and there are democratic challengers are doing everything they can, john to show that these republicans don't reflect the values of the democratic leaning
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districts specifically on the issue of abortion. the republicans don't support a national abortion ban, but have taken in some votes in the last congress that their democratic challengers point to that poke holes and raise questions about wetli, where they are lines are for what they do and don't support. and i talked to a number of voters across these three districts and john, it really is competitive and a toss-up. i mean, it's really going to be critical these final weeks and both sides know and are pouring in millions and millions of dollars to try and make their case. >> don't i know what i tried to watch football on sundays and i see a lot of political ads from these candidates. one footnote here, york takes some time to count, so we may not know control of the house becomes those of these races for a few days, annie grayer. thanks so much. okay. >> so the boeing workers strike is now into a second month and we're also now getting a real look at how costly this thing could be turning into a multi-billion-dollar problem for the company. and one that now could soon have ripple effects on the wider economy.
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cnn's vanessa yurkevich is tracking this one in vanessa, what are you seeing here in terms of the broader impact of this strike could be having some good news for average americans. this is not going to impact us likely very much at all, right, now, we have the major facility in seattle, boeing's facility shutdown and so airlines are not getting their planes that they've had on order that could mean you could see some higher prices as this extends. but right now we're actually seeing falling airline prices because there's not as much demand and a lot of these planes that airlines are waiting for our newer planes to replace older planes. however, there is going to be an impact and there is already an impact on the broader us economy one estimate suggests that just a month of this strike means 5 billion in losses for boeing, for workers for suppliers downstream that are impacted by this. and boeing says themselves that they or an economic generator of $79 billion to the u.s. they sort
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of produce and downstream effect of one 1.6 million jobs and blowing themselves are in really dire straits financially day just took out a loan essentially from several banks for $10 billion. they're trying to sell $15 billion of stock and debt. they just announced layoffs of 10% 17,000 of their employees over the next couple of months. but this is a company that's almost too big to fail. they are one of two two suppliers of passenger airlines in the world. they are not going that way. >> they're not going to go under their number one exporter here in the u.s they are in financial trouble, but they're not going away anytime soon. >> however, the longer that this strike or csis you're just going to start to feel more and more, especially in the broader economy. what visit comes then it starts turning the ripple effects. yeah, it's great to see you, vanessa. thank you so much. thank keep track of it. new hour of cnn, new news central starts now
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