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tv   CNN This Morning  CNN  October 22, 2024 3:00am-4:01am PDT

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right now on cnn this morning they. spent their money on illegal migrants. they didn't have any money left for north carolina. >> donald trump is an unserious man two weeks to go two very different closing arguments from donald trump and kamala harris plus it's not about party, it's out, right and wrong unlikely allies does kamala harris taps liz cheney and her push to win over republicans in blue wall states. >> and then she's letting vicious gangs take overhaul could be one according the latino vote will speak live with miami mayor francis suarez. >> how is donald trump's messaging resonating there? and in just moments, a high-stakes meeting in the middle east he's hopes for peace hanging in the balance. after the death of a top hamas leader
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>> all right. 6:00 a.m. on the east coast. a live look at philadelphia, pennsylvania would be out of center of this presidential race that has just two weeks to go. good morning, everyone. i'm kasie hunt. >> it's wonderful. to have you with us to more tuesday's two weeks until election day in 14 in 14 days, we could know who will be the next president of the united states. i take couple more days in that at this point, early or mail-in voting is underway in most states and over 14 million ballots have already been cast. the race. now, it's a cliche, but it's true all about driving up turnout in swing states, places like north carolina you didn't get the proper support from this administration they spent their money on illegal migrants they sweat that body they didn't have any money left for north carolina every day, kamala harris is bringing in illegal aliens who are rapists and murdering women and children. >> you see him all the time.
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you see him all the time the former president, again repeating false claims about the federal government's response to hurricane helene using those claims to attack kamala harris on his favorite issue, immigration harris. >> let's think they're blue wall states yesterday, the vice president joined there. you see her by republican liz cheney. >> what what have seemed a couple of years ago is very unlikely duo. now, of course, not necessarily so unlikely. they are explicitly reaching out to current and former members of the republican party who've had enough of trump and his rhetoric like accusing migrants of eating pets or telling vulgar shall we say stories about golf clubs, showers there are things that he says that will be the subject of skits and laughter and jokes. but words have meaning coming from someone who aspires to stand behind the seal of the president of the united states that cruelty is
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the same cruelty that we see when he lies about the federal government's disaster response. >> when he puts people's lives at risk because he won't tell the truth all right. >> our panel's here. alex thompson, cnn political analyst, national, local reporter for axios, jonah goldberg, cnn political commentator, also the co-founder and editor in chief of the dispatch, kate bedingfield, cnn political commentator, former biden white house communications director, and brad todd republican strategist, and a partner at public strategy firm on message. welcome to all of you two weeks out here we go. brad, todd, i actually want to start with you because you're doing so much work in pennsylvania. it's still really the epicenter of the thing. and the harris team has decided and you see it in their strategy that these people, they want to talk to our women perhaps who voted for nikki haley in primary in the suburbs of these places that they can they have a chance with them. what did you make of of how harris was
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executing this strategy on the trail in pennsylvania and elsewhere yesterday. and do you think that they had it right now i realize you're the republican, but when you got to run against him, you've got to spend a lot of time thinking about, i watched the whole town hall they did in michigan i think there's a they're off key because if kamala harris wants to win over republicans, the first obstacle there's a surface tension, right? there's like it's like ice, the things she has the ice she has to break is that she was way too liberal for way too long. she didn't address that at all. there was a kelty and woman calving an american woman in detroit who said, i'm a traditional catholic tell me how ai could be comfortable someone conservative can be comfortable voting for you as she start talking about home health care. i don't think kamala harris is yet brave enough to sort of walk back boldly, the sort of her california viewpoints if she's going to win over republicans, nikki haley voters. there conservative, shouldn't have to do that. >> kate, what do you think? >> well, i think this is where fair liz cheney helps. i mean, somebody who herself is very, very conservative on abortion, standing next to kamala harris and basically trying to give some of those republicans the
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permission structure to vote for her. so i do think that helps. i also i'm not sure i totally agree that voters have really absorbed her 2019 record has been a quick campaign spent less than 100 days one of the problems i think donald trump has as a messenger is that because he lies about every other thing that comes out of his mouth. i think sometimes attacks that might otherwise land effectively from another republican messenger don't really land because people say, well, i'm not sure he's really telling the truth, so i'm not sure i agree that the 2019 baggage. if you want to call it that for republican voters is going to prevent them from being there. but i think, what she was trying to do obviously, and having liz cheney next to her is assuage some of those people. and i think chinese pretty fast helped her more than she does said, i disagree with you on this. liz cheney didn't provide near enough of a contrast to shut me liz cheney was saying mechanic talking points mean she could very easily been a democratic member of congress. yes. i tend to agree with brad when in part because i think it's really
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stupid, but it's a reality of a political reality that we weave turned partisan affiliation and ideological positioning to be synonymous terms, to say someone's a republican has to say they're conservative vice versa. but in reality they're different things. and so if you want to get conservatives who don't like trump vote for harris, you, you're actually have to turn two keys, right? you have to get good people permission to betray their party and their ideological principles i think. the caveat, they must be seeing something in the data to be doing what they're doing. so they may be right and smart we'll find out in two weeks that said for a lot of my friends, a lot of my circle who are very anti-trump, but also very conservative it would be more effective to hear liz cheney, who i respect enormously say stuff like, look i think on a bunch of issues she's going to be really bad. you should still vote for her because trump is so unfit. i think that gives people
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permission to say, i'm a conservative, but screw the republican party for putting me in this position. i'm voting anti-trump, not pro of harris and that messaging is completely muddled when he's articulating what i've been hearing, which is two weeks out, republicans are more confident democrats feel more anxiety now that, that could be hubris on the part of republicans, it could just be normal democratic bedwetting is usually the term. but the fact is that there is some common here there's has been changing things up the last two or three weeks. she has changed up the message to go back to what joe biden's message was, which is instead of sort of dismissing trump as a joke, she's now talking to, talking about him as a deep threat it's also changing the sort of events she's doing. the town hall was not a mistake. i mean, she was usually just doing rallies. now she's doing more intimate settings i have to say some democrats are also worried about her schedule. >> she is not going to do any public events today. >> she's doing to tv interviews in the afternoon, but she's not on the trail. and as of so far, he's not going to be on the trail tomorrow either until i cnn
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town hall in pennsylvania in primetime so they put two weeks left. i think there are some democrats that are worried about that too. >> as more thing coming my yesterday that they mentioned it every step. you don't have to tell anyone that you're going to vote for harris. so they're counting on this shy harris vote are now eight years ago there was a toddler to talk about a shy trump voter. if you're a banking on asking people to do something that they just going to be embarrassing. you're probably asking too much. >> jonah reference data. i mean, i obviously i'm not privy to harris campaigns current data, but i can certainly tell you from my time in the biden white house, the election denialism piece is incredibly motivating with these independent voters. i mean, it's, there's a lot of discussion rightly. so about, you know, should she be more focused on the economy? should she be talking about january 6? does anybody really care anymore? i will tell you from the data that we were working with when i was there, people do care. they do. and so i think that in a moment in the final push here where you're trying to you know, really like put a board in the breach that it does do that there's
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evidence that does that. and so i imagine that that's part of what the harris campaign is doing is leaning into where they see sunlight, which is when really emphasizing that donald trump did refuse and presumably would refuse to say that he lost the election right? is your sense still that the indicators are moving in trump's direction at this writing. >> well, let's talk about a few things. my data yesterday's voter registration closed in pennsylvania for years you know that gap between democrats and republicans was seven points. now it's 3.5 points yesterday in nevada for the first time ever, republicans took the lead on early and mail voting in north carolina, republicans normally ought to be down to 18 points on early and mail voting. they're down to the early data of what's happening on the actual ballot boxes right now republicans find i'm very encouraging two weeks to go. there's a long time out, but i don't think i think we don't have to just rely on polls. now. we can now start looking at actual numbers that date is so skewed because of 2020 and covid, right, democrats were much more often going to vote by mail early
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than republicans for sure, but registration data is real registration is actually real in the north carolina, for instance democrats had a six-point edge and registration. they now have a one-point edge in registration that that's not a tactic. differential that's that's actual bodies moving. >> all right. >> still ahead here on cnn this morning, donald trump, using religion to try to step up his attacks against kamala harris, what he's telling christian voters about a potential harris administration out of election day. as we just discussed, liz cheney on the campaign trail with harris, is there a shy republican groups out there who could help the vice president be trump and gop campaigns looking to latino voters, we're going to talk to miami mayor about what messages are resonating thank with them kamala has imported an army of illegal alien gang members. they make our criminals looked like really nice people i had a broken immigration system transcending by the way, donald trump's administration, even before what's let's all be honest about that
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before election day, vice president harris faces voters and takes a pressing questions, lie. >> anderson cooper moderates a cnn presidential town hall. kamala harris tomorrow at nine eastern on cnn if you have wet amd you never want to lose sight of the things you loved. >> we get some things should stand the test of time. >> long-lasting. i leah hd could significantly improve your vision more people on islay hd had no fluid in the retina compared to those on alia at four months i leah hd's the only wet amd therapy that helped eight out of ten people go up to four months between injections after three initial monthly treatments. if you have an eye infection, eye pain, or redness, or allergies to wailea hd. don't use ai injections like i lviii hd may cause infections, separation of the retina or rare but severe swelling of blood vessels in the eye and increasing pressure has been seen. there is an
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political analysis you have questions. >> biden said, the right both stayed away. why did trump pulled out of 60 minutes? >> i love pulling out my got news for you saturday at nine on cnn stake for christians in this race, just listen to what kamala harris had to say last week at a campaign stop she heard shouting from the background jesus is lord accuser says
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them, mock them, and told them they were quote, you're at the wrong rally get. she basically said get out donald trump now claiming that kamala harris went after hecklers at her event last week because of their religion. >> trump made those comments during a faith leaders gathering in north carolina on monday night. here's the moment from the harris rally in wisconsin again, so you can listen for yourself three members of the united states supreme court with the intention that they would undo the protections of roe v. >> wade and they did as he intended. >> oh, you guys are at the wrong rally go to the smaller one down too. >> trump went on to paint a dark picture of a harris administration to the evangelical christian crowd at
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his event if kamala harris gets four more years, the radical left is not going to leave christians alone. it's going to get worse and worse. you're going to suffer greatly they will come after christians all over the country right? >> or panel's back. jonah goldberg, the sort of appeal to religious voters clearly, donald trump has had evangelical voters basically locked down for a long time but there is also discussion of catholic voters particularly in places like pencil well, vga, i'm what do you make of kind of how what he's doing there, why he's doing it, and whether it's relevant at the moment yeah. >> first of all, there's a danger and ever trying to thank them. what trump is doing here's the result of king. i'd intelligence and sophisticated strategy, right his campaign team putting him in front of that audience at this time because a decision that was probably made with where we're at a point in the
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campaign now where we should stop looking at a lot of the things that either of them say about that are bombastic and all that kind of stuff about trying to move persuadable voters. >> and it's more about getting out the vote. and i think that this is the kind of thing that for evangelical voters were already all in on trump this is the kind of thing that gets, gets there. jesus going on the merits. i think it's stupid. i also think, you know kamala harris talking about donald trump's handpicked supreme court justices. he nominated supreme court justices by that definition, every single president handpicks their supreme court justices. i mean, it just it's one of those weird things that can't stand voters are sorting in this race this way, i wrote a piece for real clear politics with salena zito back in the spring and is held up all year the one group ruled by religion that kamala harris continues to lead with their people who have no religion or who are atheists or agnostic donald trump's going to win catholics by 20 something points. >> he's going to win evangelical's about 30 something points, and he might break even with mainline christians episcopal, methodist
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people who are pretty liberal mostly assume. so there is a religious demarcation in our politics today. donald trump didn't cause that kamala harris and caused that, but that is the way things are sorted, which way or unitarians breaking what one measure john, i am one religious group that kamala harris has focused on, donald trump is probably going to lose and certainly black churches and she's began calling black pastors on day one when she got into this race also, don't trump yesterday, one of the things that he mentioned that i thought was interesting is having heard and talk about it as much a trail with the influence of norman vincent peale on him. none of its appeal wrote the power of positive thinking. he also officiated trump's first wedding. and i think often it has been this huge influence on his life because when he is lying often in his mind, he is like manifesting. that's what the whole thing of the power positive but thinking this is, this is fascinating. alex i could not, i have not focused on on that book, but it's a
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really interesting point. >> all right, coming up here on cnn this morning, we are officially two weeks from election day. liz cheney looking to rally republican voters for harris ahead. how that unlike duo is tax pre-med group. it's swing-state five swing state plus. another key demographic, both candidates are looking at latino voters we're going to speak to the mayor of miami on why he's already made up his mind eastern look, i got the new iphone 16 pro verizon, apple intelligence is pretty awesome you can get it when you trade in any phone was new iphone 16 pro and get a new ipad and apple one all on us.
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with the harris-walz campaign and this is close captioning brought to you by meso book if you or a loved one have mesothelial not we'll send you a free book to answer questions you may have call now and we'll come to you 808 to 14000 eastern united states heating up today, record warmth expected a jump from last week's below average temperatures cross-region, let's get to our meteorologist, the weatherman, derek van dam. derek, good morning. >> good morning. kasie, i think it was last week when we were trying to strategize when to carve pumpkins with our children. >> this week, i did it this
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weekend and now they're they're not going to last hate to break it to you that this is going to melt before night, okay? this record high temperatures really going to get in the way of anyone who wants that autumn weather got 93% of the lower 48 population is 300 million people plus, we're going to experience temperatures above 70 degrees. that's fairly significant. and if you look towards such as climate to logically this is more like early september weather for new york and philadelphia. so the reason being high pressure over the eastern us. so that means clear skies maximum sunshine, maximum warmth as well. in fact, we have the potential to break over 70 record high temperatures through the end of the week. look where it's focused in on much of the mid-atlantic and the new england coastline. that's where the bulk of our record high temperatures will come. dc, you were flirting with a record high yesterday today, more of the same at in atlanta most locations above that 70 degree mark, but there is some relief in sight. we just had to be patient across the south. it will move across the midwest
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and into new england for the second half of the week, you can see the cooldown in chicago, as well as new york city. the next seven days will drop below average. finally, as we edge closer to the weekend, it's this front responsible for the cooler weather, but really all it's doing is replacing the record high temperatures with more of an average october type weather patterns. so yeah, i think maybe wait until the weekend to carve those pumpkins. you have you had multiple opportunities, just buy another one like i said, well, i guess i do have to that we didn't carve that route. derek van dam. thank you. i really appreciate it. all right. still ahead here on cnn this morning, secretary of state antony blinken is in israel today to meet with israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu, trying to revive a potential ceasefire deal plus liz cheney on the trail for kamala harris trying to speak directly to republican voters who might still be on the fence >> your conscience and not ever have to say a word to anybody. and there will be millions of republicans who do that on november 5
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before election day. vice president harris basis voters and takes the pressing questions lie. anderson cooper moderates a cnn prison potential town hall, kamala harris tomorrow at nine eastern. cnn do your dry eyes still feel gritty rough or tired with my bot eyes can feel are my boy is the only prescription and dry eye drop that forms of protective layer for the number one cause of dry eye, too much tear evaporation for relief. >> that's far removed. contact lenses before using my bot. wait at least 30 minutes before putting them back in eye redness and blurred vision may occur. what does treating dry it differently feel like doctor about prescription. >> my book when it comes to
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treatment of flood of illegals skyrocketing prices, global chaos yes. in kamala wouldn't change a thing, would you have done something differently than president biden during the past four years there is donna thing that comes to mind. nothing will change with kamala, more weakness, more, more, more welfare for illegals in even more taxes, only president trump cut middle-class last taxes and only president trump will do it again. >> i'm donald j. trump and i approve this message. >> the world can be a big complicated place with opinions and hot takes everywhere, but with tiktoks keyword filter, we can block certain content from showing up in her for you feed. so that's one less thing to worry about. keyword filters on tiktok is back, right now. >> you'll say 50% sitewide on america's best steaks, chicken burgers, and so much more all backed by are 100% guarantee
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intruder, stop. this is simply see, police are on the way well, i didn't even see those guys so what about us now? luckily, i'm pretty adorable there's no safe flight. >> simply say mornings, cough, congestion. i'm feeling better all in one and done with me. it's an next kickstart better now mucinex kickstart given all in one and done relief with our morning jolted eastern cooling sensation. come back season have i got news for you saturday at nine on cnn of state antony blinken, touching down in tel aviv overnight, he is set to meet with israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu the secretary hoping to revive peace talks and move toward an agreement on a ceasefire and hostage release deal in gaza and an end to the fighting in lebanon. he israeli military pounding hezbollah targets in beirut overnight 13 people, including a child killed by an
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airstrike near the main government hospital in southern beirut. let's go live to jerusalem where we find cnn's chief global well affairs correspondent matthew chance. matthew, this of course, comes after yahya sinwar, the head of hamas, was killed up potentially some thought providing an opening to renew this push for a ceasefire deal. what can you tell us about whether that is even remotely possible? expectation at this point well, kasie, you're right. >> i mean following the death of yahya sinwar, the hamas leader last week, he was killed by israeli forces inside the gaza strip there were a lot of people in israel in the united states amongst israel's allies elsewhere as well. talking about how this could be a window of opportunity for a ceasefire for hostages. there are 101 israeli hostages still being held in gaza to be brought out and for a broader sort of settlements, a broader sort of ceasefire to be introduced in the region but that is not what's happened.
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in reality. in fact, he hamas is still leaderless it hasn't got any want to negotiate with right now and once that person is identified by the movement, it's not clear what they're negotiating position would be. in the meantime, the israeli government is pressing ahead with its strikes inside gaza, killing what was it? 27 people over the course of today according to palestinian health officials so expanded its military operations into neighboring lebanon, where it's been conducting air strikes as well. and it's poised, of course, the carrier strike on iran at which the israeli government has threatened to do as well for the past a couple of weeks. and so it doesn't seem at this stage any side in this conflict is prepared to back down or prepared to ease off the fighting. and so that's the challenge. antony blinken, the u.s. secretary of state is facing as he comes for, i think what will be his 11th trip to the region? since the war in gaza, since the october 7 attacks an enormous challenge,
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indeed. >> and of course, shouldn't lose sight of the fact that we are in fact two weeks from the election here in the u.s. which that certainly is something benjamin netanyahu is extraordinarily aware of. matthew chance for us this morning, matthew. thank you. i really appreciate it all right. >> let's turn back now to the final two weeks of the campaign democratic nominee, it's almost in some sort of book club with liz cheney cheney? >> cheney, their marvel, you're saying you can't be in the same flash back to when jon stewart first really made it. he remembers dick cheney perhaps better than many voters now, once unlikely allies, kamala harris, liz cheney joined forces yesterday as part of a swing state tour of philadelphia, milwaukee, and detroit suburbs. and of course the goal was to use cheney, former republican lawmaker from a lawmaker still a republican with true conservative, bona
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fide, to reach out to disenchanted gop voters, especially women, who may be open to voting for the democratic ticket. this time around, cheney predicted there are many more republicans we're willing to do so than you might think if people are uncertain if people are thinking well, you know, i'm a, conservative, i don't know that i can support vice president harris. >> i would say i don't know if anybody is more conservative than i am and you can vote your conscience and not ever have have to say a word to anybody. there will be millions of republicans who do that on november 5 all right. >> panel is back. we've touched on this earlier in our conversation, but i think it's kind of one of the most interesting things that's playing out on the trail right now. this question of are there these voters who silently our feel embarrassed, i think was the word you used, brad about saying that they don't want to vote for trump for whatever reason, and that they are
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interested in voting for harris is it real i don't see the evidence of it in polling mostly these suburban college-educated voters, they would, they would like gladly tell anyone who they're voting for. >> they think their opinions need to be broadcast it. >> so i don't see that as a pool of last-minute undecided voters. i understand i guess while the harris campaign is doing it because they're behind and they have to in these swing states and they had to peel off some people back. we're currently voted for trump, but that's i don't i don't know that cia well, i think there's also this question. >> if you look at the gender gap in the race and overlay the gender gap and our are they actually trying to talk to women and maga households who don't want to go against, not just go against their husband and like a very sort of like old testament kind of way, but don't want go against their community. don't want to i mean, you know, our politics has gotten so personal and there's someone tribal cultural, tribal, and people don't want to spend a bunch of time having to defend to their family and friends why they're
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voting the way were voting so i think given the dramatic july under gaap, we see in the race, it is possible that there's a universe of people who need to be reminded that their vote is private. >> you what might be there? there's a marriage gaffe and married women are going to probably vote for trump right now. single women are voting for harris bought like 75 points so it may be, that may be the root of what they're trying to do. >> yeah. i mean, look i have to think they're spending a lot of money on data, like if, if they don't see anything in there doing this anyway than the game's over, right? so there must be some reason for it. at the same time i really don't like doing anecdotes you know, anecdotes or not. the data is not the plural of anecdote but in my world, i know lots of people who say i like some good anecdata. every i don't feel guilty about it. >> you know what i want to be like, pauline kale, but i know lots of people our feel very conflicted about this and are not going to vote for trump
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because they just can't, but they don't in there this is one of the things you get from the big sort as people live in communities are on one side or another side of things whether or not they're statistically relevant number of people i have no idea. >> i mean, trump is going on basically every bro cas known to man and basically doing the inverse of what i've worked call my harris is doing right now. and that's why she's also doing it because this is why the gender gap is probably going to be the biggest and maybe american history is because not only is there real division on the issues, particularly abortion rights, but both sides are actually driving the wedge even further so you would rather have women. >> women are i think you just vote or more reliable bros a young rose last show up to vote that's true, but it's a math problem that gender gap is not a, there's not a value to it, it's just a weather map. >> yeah. >> but let's talk a little bit about one of the most interesting things i thought that came out of some of these events was how liz cheney was talking about the dobbs decision and abortion rights. let's play a little bit of how she talked about this again, liz cheney, she identifies as
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pro life. she was on the side of wanting row to fall here was a little bit of how she answered questions about this with voters. again, women voters in the suburbs yesterday i think there are many of us around the country who have been pro-life. but who have watched what's going on in our states? >> since the dobbs decision and have watched state legislatures put in place laws that are resulting in women not getting the care they need or in places like texas, for example. the attorney general is talking about suing is suing to get access to women's medical records that's not sustainable for us as a country i mean, kate, i just think it's fascinating to listen to her talk about this it is. >> i mean, she's kind of giving voice to the like the dog that caught the car issue that republicans have had on this. i mean, they've been hard
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charging, trying to overturn roe for decades, and then they did and all of these consequences which i guess maybe they would argue are unforeseen, although i don't know how you can reasonably argue that are now having an impact on people's lives and also by the way, costing them electorally so, you know, to hear her to your liz cheney of all people, kind of give voice to that really tells you where this issue has moved in the two years since the dobbs decision i mean, jonah, i think for me i think the question is, is there space here for me? >> is that something that might resonate with otherwise conservative voters, people who say yes? i think an elective abortion would be morally wrong. i'm opposed to that. but if i'm having a miscarriage and i go to the hospital, i need something. it sort of makes sense to me that i should they should take care of me. is there space for that i think look, i think so. >> i think that there is i mean referred to the dog catches the
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car thing that has been a huge issue on the right, is that the right the pro-life movement? had not really thought about day one post roe very much. and they have not developed their arguments very well. and all of a sudden, the edge cases, which were on the pro-life side about partial birth abortion, and late term abortion, no matter how rare they do it, it does happen. it's not the minnesota all a sudden the edge cases flip the emotional edge cases flip to being on the pro-choice side and very few people had any idea how to argue about that he didn't offend the new environment. and i think this is part of the shakeout when a lot of women have been the collateral damage, that lack of foresight from that movement and that's also why so many women are especially with so many abortion rights it's ballot amendments on the ballot in key swing states that could end up being the deciding factor in the race just say that the fringe cases that you say, i mean, there are a lot more of them in this construction, then there are
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the number of partial birth abortions in the country as it's very late term, abortion is very low. >> so the number of women who get pregnant every year and have something bad happen is very high but you don't hear when you go to the rallies for kamala harris, you don't hear that at every state you have emergency medical care that she her rallies are not fact checked on this subject. >> and i also i hated to what you do in places like, i mean, there i hate to watch liz cheney, who signed the amicus brakes on the dobbs case, who said, let's push this back to the states. who said, who's made a career, she was rated a by all the pro-life groups when she was in congress and she's now so all in for the democratic ticket that she's willing to sell out all the principles before i didn't i thought that was a bad look for is i don't hear anything that mean and she sold out all our principles that we had a huge fight about this on twitter are a lot of friends of mine. >> last night and everyone, the waves was originally broke on twitter, which is again, a bad place to be at night your friends are making some interesting appearances that
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you came out against overturning roe, that you came out against dobbs. there's nothing in what she said there that says she came out against that. she said that some of this stuff some of the consequences in some state legislatures have gone to the point where women aren't getting the medical care they need. you can have a problem with that. you're going to prom with the met political messaging of it. but i don't think it's fair to say she sold out all over of course, liz cheney, campaign for republicans for the u.s. >> senate, where she can't pay for a publisher just to control of the house. i don't see her doing any of that, but that's a different strategy. but politics much back on the idea that kamala harris is rallies are not fact checked on this. >> i mean, she's talking about the cases of women who have lost their lives in georgia. the woman in texas has been very prominent spokesperson on this because of her experience. we're kate cox where she lived plus her baby, and then was nearly rendered in fertile because she couldn't get medical care. i mean, these are facts. these are stories, these are happening because of the fact that these protections have been rolled back that's just true. >> i mean, there is not, you know, you can argue about whether you agree with that
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decision, but those are those are facts that's what's happening to women in this country because we know have the protections of roe v. wade, there's a middle ground where we can work to make sure everyone has the medical care they need. why think that's the ground she was trying to stake out there. she's not saying we need to put roe versus wade back. she is saying that these laws that are resulting from the fall of roe, our unsustainable, i mean, that was the word that she is. all right. straight ahead here on cnn this morning. donald trump's call for deportations under a law more given 200-years-old and how the former president's messaging on immigration is landing with latino voters. we're going to speak live with miami mayor francis suarez plus kamala harris using trump's visit to mcdonald's to try it out? highlight a key economic issue for blue-collar workers i just saw something a process is beautiful, it's a beautiful thing to see i absolutely believe we must raise he's minimum wage and that hardworking americans, whether they're working at mcdonald's or anywhere else, should have at least the ability to be able to take care of their family
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politicians that said we're not going to play games, we have to go back to 17, 98 to target and dismantle every migrant criminal network operating on american soil. we're going to knock the hell out of them right? >> donald trump calling for the return of the more than 200-year-old law that allows the president to deport non-citizens considered enemies during war time this is his latest hardline rhetoric on immigration. trump is set to participate in a roundtable discussion with latino business leaders later this morning as part of his effort to court hispanic voters immigration is a top three priority for the
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group. while harris is also reaching out to latino voters with a telemundo interview today, polls show an opportunity remains there for the former president i see people on social media, hispanics sharing that polls that i'm that we her i'm like, well, i even people that i know that they don't have legal status in this country. >> are doing that all right, joining us, now, republican mayor of miami, mayor francis suarez, he has endorsed trump for president. mr. mayor, thanks so much for being here thank you for having me appreciate it. let me just start with what we saw. trump say they're about this 17 98 law. historically, it's only been used during war time. it was used in world war ii as a pre texts for interning japanese americans. do you think what we're seeing at the border meets the standard for invoking that law i think hispanics very much care about the border. >> in fact, i saw a recent poll that showed that over 80% of
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hispanics are worried about border security not impact her quality of life as a mayor and as we've seen, even democratic mayors have criticized the current administration's border policy and the poorest but the border policy we know that under biden as of february this year, over 7 million people who entered illegally into the united states. that's more than the population of i think 36 states. that's something that tremendously concerns hispanics are live in border communities you're talking about tens of thousands of people that have died from fentanyl overdoses, which is the equivalent of a 747 crashing every single day that's something that concerns hispanics that live in border communities. >> and frankly, a lot of cities have become border communities like miami has had to really expand its public school network offering because of how many people have coming up puts a strain on the system. so i do think that his banks care about
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border security, think that they care about abiding by the laws of this country they want to have a sort of a equal playing field. they want to be prosperous and we've seen in terms of this election that this is a record versus rhetoric election, where under trump's leadership, under former president trump's leadership, you had record low unemployment, record high home ownership, and record low poverty among hispanic community. and those are going to be the sort of the indexes that hispanics are going to use to determine who they vote for are you saying that there is more concerned about the border and border security than there is about what the mass deportations that trump has promised might look like what i'm saying is that hispanics law abiding hispanics care more about having a prosperous future for themselves and their children than they do about people who are in this country illegally, correct and so i think there's a misperception that all they care about is you
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know, immigration. >> and i think that's that's something that is frankly somewhat racist. i think its banks care more about making sure that they have an opportunity to succeed, making sure that inflation doesn't crush them. every single day as it's done under this administration and their law abiding people like my parents or who came to this country at 12 and seven from, from cuba, which is a communist country and has an, has only produced misery and poverty for its people. and they see a lot of the same rhetoric being unfortunately espoused by the democratic party. that's something that concerns them so, sir i want to make sure that we acknowledged that the latino vote across the country means so many different things in so many different places, people come from different communities. obviously miami. if somebody cuban americans, et cetera. but i am still interested in your assessment of why latinos as a voting bloc, we're seeing this with black voters as well. first of color, that are not necessarily seeming to be as inclined
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toward the democratic party this time around as they have been in past election cycles, it's part of why we're seeing numbers, especially across the sun belt, seemed to look better for donald trump and you touched on some of these issues in terms of the border, but i'm curious why i, think that is and how much of it has to do specifically with culture culture i think it has to do with the fact that you know, the democrats have had four years under this administration and hispanics don't see a record of success. >> they see inflation eating their paychecks and then they see rhetoric that does not motivate them. under president trump, he was tough on latin american dictators like fidel castro's regime roe castro and miguel diaz cut out and then also in venezuela as well. and that resonated with the cuban and venezuelan communities. i saw a statistic ones where he got 75% of new rival cubans voted for the former president
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in the 2020 or the 2016 election of kill them. which one? >> at the same time, you had democrats monolithically branding hispanics as latinx something that doesn't resonate with the hispanic community or saying that there has unique to san antonio tacos, which is something that the first lady said in one of her speeches in i believe san antonio so those are things that hispanics just feel disconnected from the democratic party they feel so that's democratic party has not listened to them, has not made their lives better. >> they're looking for an alternative. and i think that's part of what you see. and then i also think that the former president has listened. he's listened better to the hispanic communities, tailored his policies specifically, to meet the needs. as you said, i think very correctly of the diverse hispanic communities are not monolithic, are not the same. every community needs a different approach has different priorities and they have to be met and an
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individual basis all right. >> mayor francis suarez of miami, sir. thanks very much for coming on with your perspective. i really appreciate it thank you so much. >> can't wait to vote for president trump today thank you, sir i actually want to just take a beat before we talk about this next story because brad, i mean why kate i'm honestly interested in all your perspective as to why this is moving the way that it is. >> and in pennsylvania, for example, reading pennsylvania is a place, it's a city with a lot of latinos who are living there i talked to the mayor of that city is it's a different kind of story, but there is an undercurrent of potentially pro trump influences there in a way that i think might surprise some people. what do you see going on with this? >> i think democrats approach the latino community wrong. they have an identity politics approach. and i think a lot of immigrants to this country don't want that. they want to be treated as americans it's not something hyphen americans. and i think when you look at their individual concerns, it's inflation is crime. wait
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a minute, the border, it's the same as everybody else. donald trump is going to get more hispanic votes and republicans down-ballot or, and get more spending. less this year than they ever have before some of its culture we mentioned earlier that trump currently leads among catholics by 22 points that that's a factor but it's definitely a big movement. >> i think four years from now, republicans will carry this painting, but i also think some democratic strategists, for a long time mostly liked him democratic strategists, to be honest basically thought that what's unit vote equaled immigration policy. and that's just not true. >> yes. there's a huge gap as there are with frankly, most advocacy groups working in washington and real voters, excuse me, there's a huge gap between the professional advocacy class representing people who are trying to make progress on immigration laws in some cases, doing very good work. i'm not impugning them, but there's a huge difference and there's a big gap and voters mull largely i agree with brad and with the mayor of voters of all stripes largely care about the economy. they
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care about crime, they care about safety, they care about being the same thing that all voters care about shunt treading made this point a decade ago. >> that hispanics voted just proportionally democratic, not because of identity politics reasons, but because they were disproportionately poor and as hispanics move up, the socioeconomic ladder, they become indistinguishable from the median voter it is normal story of american immigration, of american ethnic groups. they just become americans. and so therefore, you would expect their distribution between the parties would look more normal way, but it's interesting because a lot has been acts that aren't moving towards trump or not middle are not necessarily middle-class or upper-class hispanics. it's a lot of people are just high school educated, right? >> but a lot of those people are also coming there's also enormous amount of diversity and hispanic community. so it's one of the problems with the dc consulting class. that's thought a monolith. but like the ones that are coming from places that have seen the ravages of communism. >> they're very susceptible to the arguments against communism
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in the united states. >> and that means they're going to skew i mean, like venezuela, all that kind of stuff. they're going to skew more republican and fit more with the cuban model than say the california mexican american. >> well, this is also part of kamala harris problem because as kate remember, during the 2020 primary, joe biden resisted some of these calls. so you just go wait far to the left decriminalizing the border everything else and kamala harris didn't he resist a lot of those calls and that's really hurting right now. >> i mean, kate should democrats drop the latinx framing. >> what i feel as a white person that's not my call to say. i think it has always felt a little at least what we would hear i could i could say the biden campaign in 2020 20 what we would hear from voters on the ground is it didn't necessarily resonate with them. it felt a lot more like language that people who were, again, professional, political professional, political class was using so again, i'm not i feel like it's not it's not my call to say liberal friends and it's not they feel like it was
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resonating with latin american voters born has been a polling on this, but i'm, i'm, i'm sort of obsessed with this among latinos of going back last five years, who've heard the phrase, because most of them have never heard the phrase, of course, all good fricking luck, d gendering the spanish language that it is a lot more than just one x on what that is. >> but most hispanics of who heard it didn't like it. they felt they were being condescended to by like sort of harvard yard academics there were a whole bunch of progressive polling firms that were basically shouting, please stop using this because you're losing more hispanic voters than you're gaining when you use it, it's a flashing red light. if you're conservative in canada definitely can hispanic that this party is way left of view on every cultural issue. it's one letter that tells you everything, right? >> fascinating. all right, guys, thanks so much for a great conversation today, two weeks out all right. thanks to all of you for joining us as well. i'm kasie hunt. don't go anywhere. cnn new central starts right now

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