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redefining insurance job. it will kill you would now be good it's time to talk about career progression the franchise streaming exclusively on max close captioning brought to you by meso mesobook.com if you or a loved one have mesothelial mac will send you a free book to answer questions you may have called now and will come to you 808 to 14000
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>> welcome to the amanpour hour. here's where we're headed this week filing where all in 2004. >> i saved sinwar's life in prison from my archive, uvalde beton tells his unbelievable story, what this israeli doctor learned about yahya sinwar's plans plus, i don't know that a country can withstand. >> it's character can withstand another term of donald trump, former house speaker nancy pelosi, on electing kamala harris, and whether she's talked to president biden since suggesting he stepped down then an election like no other, we bring you the view from abroad and at home with leslie vinjamuri of chatham house here in london. and democratic strategist simon rosenberg. >> and i am always winner whose rules this rule is attack, attack, attack. the film this
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triggering trump. >> i'm joined by ali abassi, director of the apprentice also ahead what can send you to death row in singapore, an exclusive look inside the country's prisons and finally into the rock and roll hall of fame when the one and only shared told me about reinventing herself and her incredible career everyone, i'm christiane amanpour in london. >> president biden has been in europe for his last ever meeting with the european court of leaders as the u.s. inches closer to deciding his replacement and the next leader of the free world. and while there's no no question that it is on a knife-edge, americans aren't the only ones on the edge of their seats foreign governments and citizens worldwide are anxiously awaiting the outcome of this
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election to so every vote remains crucial as that formidable vote getter and former house speaker nancy pelosi knows all too well. he spent this week here in the uk, thing up votes with democrats abroad. warning us citizens that the stakes in this election are higher than any other time in recent history. and she came into the studio earlier this week to lay that out. and also to talk about her new book, the art of power. i started by asking her though, to react to events in the middle east where israeli strikes hit un peacekeepers in lebanon and the country's continued bombing of gaza has forced the biden administration to reiterate its strongest calls yet for israel to let humanitarian aid in. i spoke to her before reports of hamas leader yahya sinwar's death were confirmed well, the fact is that we just a few days ago observed one-year anniversary of a terrible assault on israel
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by hamas, a terrorist group dedicated to the destruction of israel sadly, since then, we've seen many casualties of the non-combatants. >> children have families, and gaza. and now some elsewhere in the region and it's just intolerable cannot we more has to be outlawed as a resolution of any conflict or disagreement but right now, we have to live with the circumstances that we have. we've all been talking about a two-state solution for a long time. for israel and for the palestinians the current leader. and israel does not agree to that i don't know if netanyahu wants peace. i don't know if he's capable of peace. i don't know if he's afraid of peace but he has gone off the course that we all thought we were in as we support israel, he actually came to the congress not so long ago what
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did you make of that invitation? and the way he spoke against your party on your administration, this speech that he the worst presentation ever made by a leader of a country invited to speak before the congress. i was against the invitation, but i'm not the speaker anymore and of course i did not attend but i didn't observe what he had to say was most unfortunate. but we all support israel. it is our in our national interest, our security interest to do so, our values interest to do so over time. but right now the leverage that we have given a netanyahu has been used in a way that is most destructive. >> let me talk about your book now called the art of power. you've said in your book, i know donald trump's mental imbalance. i had seen it up close. his denial, and then
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delays when the covid pandemic struck his pension for repeatedly jumping out of meetings is foul mouth, his pounding on tables, his temper tantrums, his disrespect for our nation's patriots, and his total separation from reality and actual events do you think this country, your country can survive another, another term well, i've said over and over again, one term our country is strong enough to withstand but when you see what he's even gotten worse since i wrote that, he's saying in this campaign that he will criminalize any comments that are criticizing his actions have criminalize freedom of speech. >> he of course, will have a ban on abortion, a national ban on abortion, even though he says he won't. >> he lips are moving, he's not telling the truth. when you go to so many of the things that he is doing, what is it
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democracy? that's what's on the ballot. a democracies free and fair elections and a peaceful transfer of power independent judiciary. it's about having respect for our continent in which we take an oath to protect and defend. he says maybe we should terminate the constitution. so i don't know that a country can with stan, its character can withstand another term of donald trump, but we're not, we don't agonize. we organize, we have made a decision to win this election, and it depends on the turnout. >> they say, nancy pelosi is who and what convinced president biden that he had to read you consider, as you famously put it, make the decision about whether he's going to run or not going to run do you talk to him since july ever spoken to him since july, but of course, we've been out of session for a while and i've been on the campaign trail constantly. i have great
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respect for the president, i think his legacy is a very substantial one for our country it is our legacy to i did not want that to be lost. now, my concerns were around the campaign, not about the can he's fabulous but the campaign is though it was not going in the right direction and i express my concern about that. it was up to the president to make the decision whether he would continue to run. he made that decision. do you think you could have one with him as the candidate it's hard to believe hard to ask me a question because i don't understand how anybody could vote for trump. but they do and so we have to be prepared. i do think there was a generational thing though that had to be recognized. the two of them, so old to be running for president. >> you talk about trying want to play what trump actually said about democracy and about account how it might work out.
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he said it to fox news on sunday and he was talking about an enemy within i think the bigger problem is the enemy from within, not even the people that have come in and destroying our country. by the way, totally destroying our country. the towns, the villages they're being inundated but i don't think they are the problem in terms of election. i think the bigger problem are the people from within. we have some very bad people. we have some sick people, radical left, lunatics. it should be very easily handled by, if necessary, by national guard or if really necessary by the military he probably includes, you in the radical left and probably includes you as an enemy from within national guard military what you have to understand about the former president is he's always projecting when he talks about the enemy within, he's talking about himself and his supporters. when he's talking about actions that may be taken, he's talking about
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what they have done, what they are doing right now and what they may continue to do. so understand when he says crooked hillary, he knows he's cook when he says crazy, nancy, he knows he's crazy. when he says the enemy within, he's talking about himself. >> nancy pelosi's book, the art of power is out now coming up later on the show, the film that's driving trump social media at 1:00 in the morning. i speak to the director of the apprentice. >> if were agitating all sides, then we're doing something right? >> but up next, the view from america i couldn't here and there, our panel on what the polls are really saying at this late stage in the race before election day, vice president harris bases voters and takes to pressing questions anderson cooper moderates a cnn presidential town hall, kamala harris, wednesday at nine eastern on cnn
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brokers selling your contact details, browsing history, even social security number we know it sounds scary. so remove your personal data from data brokers within cagney, get the deal and go in cognitive. now, have our guys news for you tonight at nine on cnn? this final stretch, what each candidate does or doesn't do. now is being closely watched. both are going out of their comfort zones to reach out for voters former president trump getting a grilling on univision by latino voters, where he tried to shift the narrative around the storming of the capitol on january 6, but that was a day of love from the standpoint of the millions. it's like hundreds of thousands could have been the largest group. i've ever spoken before. they asked me to speak i went and i spoke and i use the term peacefully and patriotically a day of love.
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>> well, vice president kamala harris sat down for an interview with fox news, where she forcefully pushed back against trump's enemy within comments. >> he's talked about locking people up because they disagree with him. this is a democracy and in, in a democracy, the president of the united states in the united states of america should be willing to be able to handle criticism without saying he'd lock people up for doing it. and this is what is at stake high-stakes, indeed. >> so what might end up being the deciding factor in battleground states? it's a case of high anxiety for republicans and democrats as the presidential race remains in a dead heat with me to discuss the massive global stakes of this election on leslie vinjamuri of the london-based think tank, chatham house and democratic strategist simon rosenberg leslie vinjamuri, simon rosenberg, welcome back to the
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program. thank you. can i start with you, leslie, because president biden has been overseas there's lot going on and obviously the world is looking at the next president and what it'll mean. what do you think of what the allies are thinking, for instance, will there be another g7 i think people are very concerned if donald trump were to be elected, whether there will be a g7. >> some people are talking about how to move ahead, even if donald trump doesn't wish to participate. and it was elected. the key thing is america's partners and america's allies understand what could be coming. this is what makes us very, very different from 2016 as we all know, they are preparing. we have been traveling across asia, europe, and latin america at chatham house's been fielding teams with former us government officials, experts meeting with government officials and experts in country. and we're going to start at how well-prepared people are, how much they're thinking about it. and especially a very high level of pragmatism and everywhere but europe and europe people are
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very distressed. they're very concerned. there level of excitement and not in a good way, anxiety desire to simon what to what sort of pragmatic steps the other parts of the world taking? >> well, i mean, i think first of all, there is a recognition. take mexico, there's a recognition that actually they worked out how to work with donald trump. they renegotiated after they got the new us mca, the trade accord, they understood that there were some better parts to that the labor rights that were in that agreement, so they could see that they had experience and that they were still that they had experienced are steeled for it. there's but there's also a signaling thing going on here knowing that we're going to come back, we're going to talk about this. the japanese leaders that we met with all said, we're prepared to work with anybody. this is incredibly important, will work with trump, will work with harris the other thing that really came out in spades though, was the deep
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disappointment across both sides of the aisle with what america has to offer when it comes to economic policy, market access they understand, i think that this could be much more difficult disruptive with trump administration that we'll see a return to the tariff wars, that the instability that the rhetoric, that the language, the style of diplomacy would be difficult. but there's no real optimism that a biden administration is going to start open its opening markets, sorry, i harris administration that's in very interesting slip by my part, right? because there is a sort of implicit conversation will there be much difference? we didn't see? i think there will be a difference between biden and harris. we didn't see america's partners and allies thinking that there will be a significant difference between biden and harris. so they're assessing it as a continuity on the democrats who let me ask you, simon then because you are an inside is inside is it a good or a bad thing that the perception at least overseas is that there wouldn't be much
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difference. i mean, this week kamala harris, vice president, said, i will not be a continuation of the biden presidency. what does she mean obvious thing, right? >> of course, she's going to pursue her own course. she you know, she's already laid out a series of things that she's wanted to do domestically tackle the housing crisis in the united states that are things that just didn't get done in the biden era. she's got a new set of challenges that biden and it's going to be a very different administration if she wins, i think she will win. that's already been laid out rhetorically. i mean, her rhetoric around the economy is very different from biden's and i think it's much more tied to optimism, upward mobility. this line she has about how she wants people not to just get by but get ahead. is very in sync with where the democratic party has been over the last 30, 40 years. but i think it's going to be this is she's going to have to make some big decisions when she wins about all these matters.
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and i think our foreign allies are going to need to be engaging aggressively to try to help weigh in about where they think our government should go assignment i do need to ask you, you seem to be coming and certainly you have your hope pm blog in which you are just radiant hope and change and all the rest of it optimism, optimism there you go. >> but why are you so optimistic given that it's so incredibly knife-edge right now that we are inundated with from the democratic perspective, horror stories of how the black vote is being waged missiles away, moving towards trump, the latino vote, to an extent why are you so hopeful and how do you analyze those particular demographics? >> yes. so three things, one is in the polling today, we have a modest lead nationally after having, when the vice president gotten into the race, who are down by 30 points, we're now up by about three points. we have a modest advantage in the battleground, states were
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closer to 270 than donald trump is. and i think that the confidence that we have is that a since the dobbs decision in the spring of 2022, democrats have continually overperformed polling and expectations republicans have continually underperform polling and public expectations that there is this reticence as there wasn't europe and france to vote for the far right when it came to the day of actually voting. and you've seen this incredible unprecedented effort by republicans and by former republicans to push republicans towards harris. and i think it's going to matter on election day. but the second reason i think we have quiet confidence that we'd much rather be us than them is that we just have much more money in a far more sophisticated ground game to close strong in these final few weeks it's close now. but if one of the two parties is likely to push the election towards them, it's us because of our advantages in terms of we're gonna have more ads on the air. we're going to be talking to voters more. and our candidate is much more popular and is seen as much
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more favorable, unlikable, than their candidate. i feel in every moment in my body, 30 plus years in this business, i would much rather be us than them at this point. >> okay. that's a nice way to put it because i was going to say you're the guy also who told us that. oh, no, there's nothing there biden's fine. he should be allowed to continue, cetera yeah. >> listen, i mean, i think it was a sign of maturity of a political party that when we needed to make a change and do, did so in a very graceful manner and effective manner that we are where we are now, lizzie, i want to ask you and i'm afraid it is a relevant issue what does the world think of donald trump's mental acuity? i mean, a proofing themselves in one way, but what do they think about his fitness, his mental fitness. >> i think people are really concerned that a second trump administration will be won't have the grownups in the room. we know the story, it won't have the rational people around the outer circles that there is a plan. people still think that
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now everybody knows about project 2025. the great irony, right? the president has the former president has divorced himself from the plan. everybody else thinks it is the plan. and so they are worried. they're worried that not only the mental acuity, the fitness of the man, that the age of the man, but that the direction of travel in america because democracy in america is a leadership, would be very difficult for them to manage. >> up next, our letter from london and the film, trump doesn't want you to see. >> i'm rich and handsome. i have a great family. i'm going to be in the know building sure. >> i speak with ali abassi, director of the apprentice when we come back at 11 eastern on cnn blast. dishwashers use water lifts at finish tasks, more success work well together every time burns on, sainz get out, shine
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you by mesobook.com if you or a loved one have neizha helium up, we'll send you a free book to answer questions you may have call now and we'll come to you 808 to 14000 just been released in the united states. and here in the uk, its most vocal critic donald trump, the apprentice portrays trump's rise as a young real estate developer and his complicated character and despite risk saving an eight minute standing ovation when it premiered at the cannes film festival, it was a fight to get the film released in the united states. in our letter from london this week, i spoke with director ali abassi about his motivation to portray trump's origin story, his cutthroat, red-baiting mentor, and what it all says about the republican nominee and former president today. ali abassi, welcome to the program.
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>> thank you for having so we are going to talk about your film, the apprentice, which is a movie, but it's also become a political minefield. >> first and foremost, it is the story of donald trump's beginnings. >> that's right way before he had the presidency in his eyes, it takes place between 1973 and 1986 why did you want to do this movie everyone has an opinion about him, right everyone thinks that they know him is a very polarizing figure. and it's really exciting to dive back and say, oh, he was not the person who you think he was, and he gone through a sort of a major transformation and look at that and look at that sort of colorful 70s and 80s new york with these large life characters. but also as someone, you know, as an outsider to united states and american society. that's my chance to look at the power structure of america, the legal structure, and the sort of the social darwinism that has created some of the

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