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tv   CNN News Central  CNN  October 22, 2024 5:00am-6:00am PDT

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president donald trump for his role and what they say was defaming them during the debate with kamala harris, here is what he said and what they are suing over when lot of people, including mayor bloomberg agreed with me on the central park five, they admitted they said they pled guilty and i said, well, if they pled guilty, they badly hurt a person, killed a person ultimately they didn't kill anyone, and they were exonerated for the accused rape. there's so much discussion around polling showing black men voting for donald trump and larger numbers at this time around with this in the backdrop, what do you think black men are leaning and why do you think they're leaning more towards donald trump than any other republican candidate in the past is unfit to be president sometimes when you look and then make your decision, you should also judge a person by the account that dr. king said look at someone's right by
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that my character, not by the color of their skin and so here is a man and who clearly continues to talk about black man in a negative way. >> that's all he's ever done. >> just look at his history. is history is from the beginning that running out to black people you look at his how many black men has he ever hide and his business ever look at his person that all he's done is the people that he's ripped off. the few people, a few in minority individuals that he might have done business with most of them some point lost money as a result of him because he's a guy who himself has gone bankrupt six times so i think that what black men is looking and asking for and i think that the vice president correctly said the afternoon questions, you know, more black men will vote for the vice president than anybody else other than black woman. >> so they asked him questions.
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>> and i think that the vice president is answering those questions and talking about what she has done and what she will do which is what any voters should be doing, is i think that in the end, you'll see that black men overall in huge numbers for the vice president of the united states, congressman gregory meeks. thank you so much. appreciate your time this morning. a new hour of cnn news central starts right now johnfavorite day of the year, the day he gets to remind all of us of the definition of a fortnight. >> the focus sub for the candidates today and the lawsuits that are already starting to fly right now in israel, america's top diplomat 20, blinken is meeting with prime minister benjamin netanyahu. these talks coming at a news moment of uncertainty as regional stability and a potential ceasefire hanging in the balance and growing calls for an investigation from
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former republican and officials. why elon musk's plan to give it $1 a day to registered voters might break the law. i'm kate bolduan with john berman and sara sidner for this is cnn new central >> that's it. 14 days? that's all that kamala harris and donald trump have left in this historically tight race, at least in the polls. and this morning, a deluge of brand new campaign details are dropping faster than a mike had an eight-mile wrap battled eminem in a rare public appearance will make a rare political endorsement and introduce former president obama when he visits detroit tonight. before that, obama hits the critical battleground state wisconsin with tim walz is harris takes a break from the trail for tv interviews. and as donald trump soon sits down for a roundtable with latino leaders with just
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14 days until election day in america. let's bring in cnn political director david chalian to tell us the one big thing they need to know no today, david, what does that take away well, you said it's it's two weeks to go until we count the votes as you know, sara more than 15 million people have already cast their vote in this election. >> the election is very much underway, but as voters are dialing into this race and prepare two weeks now to watch, of course, right here on cnn, the vote returns unfold. it is important to take stock of where we are and what that means for when we'll know a result and patients will be in order here. so just looking at the blue wall states those three yellow battleground states. you see there in the great lakes region, pennsylvania yeah michigan and wisconsin. we know that in michigan and wisconsin, the big city population centers of detroit in michigan and milwaukee, wisconsin. they may not report all their vote until
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about 4:00 in the morning on wednesday. obviously, we'll need to see what that vote is to understand what the total sales the play in those states are. so maybe no projection on tuesday night from those states. if it is as close as polls suggest. and in pennsylvania they can't even process the mail ballots until election day until the polls open. and so therefore, sara given that half the electorate may end up voting by mail, voting early it's going to take a little while for folks in pennsylvania to count process, unfold, flattened, and count all those ballots we may not have a result. they're until wednesday perhaps. so this may take awhile given the fact that david plouffe, the senior adviser to the harris campaign's harris says, some of these states are going to be decided by less than a percentage point, which is crazy. people have to be prepared for that. a lot of people nervous about that as well. how long it might take to get a result. harris is now sitting down with nbc for an
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interview that will air tonight. she is also of course, has a cnn town hall tomorrow, 9:00 p.m. with anderson cooper. what is she hoping to do with this and get out of this her main goal in these final two weeks is to raise the stakes of the this election in minds of voters. >> and i imagine that is what you're going to see her. do you noted i think she's sitting down with telemundo. she's sitting down with nbc news each one of these interviews that she's doing, also going to do a cnn town hall tomorrow with us in suburban philadelphia in delaware county, pennsylvania their main goal, hermine goal, has been to draw a sharp contrast with trump on every issue at every moment of the day. and i'd be surprised if that's not what comes through in these interviews show he's doing today because their goal is to remind voters of the negatives of donald trump because we see in a lot of polling that a lot of voters remember the positive sense of the economy or having more money in their pockets. and
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they, the harris campaign believes a second trump term could be far more dangerous and they want to remind voters of that as they go into the voting booth, we are in the final stretch, david chalian, it feels like it came so fast. thank you so much. appreciate it. >> thank you. >> all right. with us now, cnn senior political analyst, ron brownstein and republican strategist and former rnc communications director, doug heye. gentlemen, vice president harris spent dina entire day in the three blue wall states, a phrase, i believe invented by ron brownstein, nice to have you here yesterday with liz cheney, a republican. the three most important states in this election, a whole day with just two weeks left, i want to play a little bit of sound from that i certainly have many republicans who will say to me, i can't be public. they do worry about a whole range of things and grabbing violence. but, but they'll do the right thing and i would just remind people if you're at all concerned you can vote your
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conscience and not ever have to say a word to anybody. there will be millions of republicans who do that on november 5 so that was the message sent ron and the question is to who is it just republicans or is it a little more complicated than that? the message that was targeted precisely at the voters who are most available to her in the places where they are most available to her. if you kind of look at these three states that fell out of the blue wall in 2016 and biden put them back in in 2020? michigan, pennsylvania, wisconsin, key to his improvement there was it. he ran better than hillary clinton did in the big suburban counties. the force of urban counties outside philadelphia. but wow, counties outside of milwaukee gain county, which is madison as well as oakland county outside of michigan, outside of detroit. that's where she was in, 2022, john, it's important to note the democratic gubernatorial
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candidates generally ran better than biden did two years earlier. that was the first election after the supreme court, rescinded the nationwide right to abortion. so i'm just back from oakland county myself. i think if you look at these places, they are the community he is where harris is most likely to improve on biden's 2020 performance, particularly with college educated white women, maybe also some of the non-college white women in those communities. and the cheney appearances, i think was precisely targeted to try to increase the permission structure to slice away a few more points of those votes maybe some among people who identify as republicans, but certainly among independent voters who had previously voted republican, mostly on economic issues. but fine trump, a threat to their rights, their values, and are receptive to the message that he is a threat to democracy doug, what extent are these, the swing voters, the haley voters, maybe from the primary, who by the way, warrant all registered
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republican. >> you're talking about the same subset of voters, right? some of them are registered republicans, some of them are independent, and they're looking for, as ron said, that permission structure to vote for harris, but they also want to hear from kamala harris. so the events that harris did yesterday with liz cheney speaks to some of their concerns, but these are the same voters who are saying to the harris campaign look, we don't like donald trump but we know who donald trump is. who are you and what do you want to do? and i think the real vulnerability for the harris campaign here is that age-old question of the devil, you know, versus the devil. you don't know, you always go with the devil, you know, they know donald trump. they need to get to know kamala harris and time's ticking on that. >> i want to ask you. we just said david chalian on and all of us who've covered politics for a long time, we swear an oath every four years and we're not going to focus overly on the early voting one vote. today accounts much as one count, not on election day, but yes, but there are some interesting things happening in nevada where they voted early for some time. now, after three days of early voting, more
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republicans have voted there, than democrats. this is not something that we have seen the last few elections is this, what is this a sign of? what are the possibilities here? >> so i try and disregard early voting as well, even though i usually vote early and look at north carolina as well, we see republican numbers are up, democratic numbers are down compared to 2020 but i'm not looking at the republican or democrat numbers. i'm looking at the unaffiliated voters in north carolina and what are they going to do? what have they done already? and over the next two weeks, where are they? that's what's going to be, what decides this election. that's what the harris cheney event was about yesterday, speaking to those voters. but if you voted early obviously you've already made up your mind. and so those voters who are not voting early but unaffiliated, but are voting on election day they're still up for grabs. either candidate could get them iran, i do suppose every four years this is the one time when the phrase cannibalism is okay because the question is, are are republicans finally getting their act together in early
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voting? but somehow cannibalizing some of the election day vote they've enjoyed the last a couple of cycles and that's what makes it john so complicated to try to really divine too much from early vote because those questions are really critical and hard to understand with full transparency. >> this far from the boat, you know, one thing that is clear, the story that after dan cnn.com, bill frye, the great demographer has calculated from the latest census data that the change in the composition of the electorate that we've been experiencing over the last generation has continued between 20 and 2024. and that means is that the non-college white voters who are the cornerstone of the modern republican coalition, especially in the trump era, have continued to decline by about two points as a share of eligible voters replaced equally by an increase of about a point each among college whites. and people of color, what's really significant to me is that in michigan and wisconsin, two of the former blue wall states that decline in non college, non-college
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whites as a share of the vote exceeded the national average replace mostly by the college whites were the kind of voters that liz cheney and a kamala harris we're focused on yesterday, but in pennsylvania, the change was less than the national average and that could be a critical distinction in a race that, you know, looks like a butterfly effect race where like kind of what any flutter in the environment might be enough to change the dynamic between these two coalitions that are utterly antithetical. and what they want for the country and almost exactly equal in size in john, the increased number of early voters tells us that voters have confidence in the system. >> so when i look at north carolina and these numbers are huge, we have 15% of bye, bye. if today, while 15% of voters have already voted early, it tells us they have confidence in the system that the vote is secure, that the count will be accurate and ultimately, you that the state boards of election, north carolina being a key one, obviously georgia, nevada, michigan as well. voters believe in the system and that's important and something that gets lost in the
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process of all the crazy arguments we've heard over the last days, arnold palmer accepted an encouraging sign not talking about the farmer. i'm talking about the early voting. doug heye, ron brownstein. thank you both very much. >> former republican officials now urging the department of justice to investigate what they think is elon musk's illegal $1 million a day giveaway? some registered voters, new details this morning on what a toxicology report found was in liam payne system after the former one direction star's death in argentina and secretary of state tony blinken and meeting right now with the israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu as the united states is seeking, hoping to revive hostage release let's talk for you are pretty yeah. what are the kinds we could run on the news before then? >> i would never happened if i got news for you saturday at
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the phoen, experienced the cnn magic wall in the palm of your hand. >> get live results expert insights and an immersive election experience. the magic wall, find it in the cnn app today it push this morning from republicans trying to challenge elon musk's million dollars giveaways to registered voters in a letter obtained by cnn, 11 former gop officials and government attorneys are now asking both attorney general merrick garland and the pennsylvania attorney general to investigate what musk is doing in key battleground states. >> cnn's marshall cohen is looking into this. he's got more marshall. what does this letter say? >> hey, kate? well, the letter is asking for an investigation into elon musk because of this stunt that he launched over the weekend, where he is going to be paying 1 million a day to people who sign his petition in
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support of the constitution the, problem here though, as we've already reported, is that it might not be legal because in order to get that money, you need to be a registered voter and you need to live in a swing state and federal law is pretty clear that you cannot give inducements or prizes or cash in exchange for registration so let's take a look at that letter from these former republican officials calling on the justice department to take a look at this they say, quote, we recognize that they are framed as payments for signing a petition or for referring voters who signed but many of the payments are restricted to registered voters. anyone who wishes to get paid must first register. that's the crux of the problem here. the signatory to this letter, they are former republican governors and lawmakers and justice department officials they're anti-trump, but they think this is important for the rule of law. kate i will say so. i want to make clear that we have
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reached out to elon musk's super pac for comment on this situation they haven't to answered and musk has defended his sweepstakes on his social media platform. but the scrutiny keeps on rising. i want to play for you a clip from last night, one of the top election officials in phoenix, stephen richer sure sat down with our colleague, erin burnett. and by the way, he's also a republican this is unchartered territory. >> it starts to look like this type of thing that you're attorneys would advise against. but he comes from a world in which you sort of shoot first and then ask questions later. and so i guess he's bringing that startup mentality to his new poll political interests the justice department. >> we reached out to the pennsylvania ag's office to see if they had anything to say about this letter. and they got the letter and they declined further comment. >> okay. mar-a-lago. and thank you so much, sara. >> just into our newsroom this
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morning, dramatic new images of the aftermath of that tragic dock collapse. that left seven people dead in georgia the video is just ahead. plus, we are in the homestretch of the 2024 election millions of early ballots have already been cast, but already lawsuits are flying. what all this means for the election ahead before election day vice president harris basis voters and takes the pressing questions lie. anderson cooper moderates a cnn presidential town hall, kamala harris weighed nine eastern on cnn when you're looking for answers, it's good to have help because the right information at the right time may make all the difference and humana, we know that's especially true when you're looking for a medicare supplement insurance plans that's why we're offering seven things every medicare supplement should have its yours free, just for calling the number on your
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in multiple swing states to get out since some of those votes thrown out, there, will likely be even more legal action which means this election season will
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not end likely on november 5, joining us now to break down all the important dates, the author of cnn's what matters newsletter zachary, wolf joining us now. zachary, the election two weeks away that is so close, we are really in the final stretch. but that doesn't seem to be the end of this as soon as those lawsuits are filed, you know, this is going to drag on well the lawsuits and also the counting of the votes. i mean, let's not forget that. four years ago in 2020, it was for days after election day that cnn ultimately projected that joe biden would win. it could be just as close today, the polls are just as close and so that sets off this timeline, this post-election in timeline, where a lot of stuff is going to happen. so people should be ready for number one, trying to figure out who won the thing that could take some time the president, foreign president trump, potentially president elect trump depending on what happens on election day in the days afterward, he's going to be sentenced in new york on
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those 34 counts of falsifying business records or business records in november, all of the lawsuits about the election need to be wrapped up by december 11. all of the counting issues that's the date that congress decided after the 2020 election. they put this hard date, december 11, for this. they call them certificates of ascertainment to be finalized, and that sets up the electors, the people who actually do pick the president and our weird system of government. those people meet on december 17 in state capitals. so this process will take place after election day and we need to all be ready for this kind of drawn out. thank it's one thing to tell people to be ready. >> its nerve thing that when it happens and if it is long and drawn out, a lot of worry about what will happen next. zachary wolf. thank you so much for the very good reminder that we need to be patient. john all right. >> given that we have reached the final fortnight, and by that i mean, two weeks exactly to the day. right leg. left fortnight means two weeks. what
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medieval? >> sure. why not medieval guy. >> it's a good time to check in on where the race is. cnn senior data reporter, harry enten is ray two kept medieval with us. >> you're gonna get knighted how close is this race? okay so when we talk about a historically close race, oftentimes we talk about the national polling, but i wanted to try and dig into the state numbers to get an understanding of how close this race as a whole lee cow from a historical perspective. >> so what i did for all of the years going back since 1,906 72 was i took a look at the final polls and then i basically calculated out what the electoral map would look like and how high up with the leading candidates electoral vote total get. and what we essentially see is right now the leaders electoral vote total is 276 electoral votes based upon the polls if you go back since 72 and try and find the closest years, if you go back to 2000, which of course was a historically close election at the end of the campaign, the poll leaders electoral vote total was just
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281 electoral votes. that's where gore wasn't a final polls that campaign. you go back to 2000 for george w bush was at 296 electoral votes. so based upon the polls at this point, we're heading into the election with a closest polls in the electoral college that we have ever seen, at least over the last 50 years. it's stuff like this that gets me up in the morning. it gets me truly cited as a political sort of science. this is a really interesting way to look at. >> i never would have thought of this, but basically what the polls are showing right now, the poll correct. the closest race in terms of the electoral vote that we've ever seen exactly is fascinating. all right, how about in the key states? yes. how about in the key states it's not just when you tally up the electoral votes. harris likely musk harry, three of these four states to win. and these are the states most likely to determine the electoral college. look at this north carolina less than a point lead for trump, wisconsin, less than a point lead for harris, michigan, the exact same thing, pennsylvania, the exact same thing. basically the four states that are most likely to determine this outcome are all
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within a point. and when we span this out to the electorate so college, what do we get? we get exactly this harris with that 276 electoral votes because she carries these great lake battleground states, right but let's just say we flipped pennsylvania in the polls don't match result exactly right? what happens? we've flipped pennsylvania to read and then we get trump to 281 electoral votes, which is not really much of a long shot given that at this particular point, the race in pennsylvania is within a single going all right. >> you know, you just showed those four states all within one point. david plouffe, who is working for the harris campaign says, all seven swing states or within one point, have we ever seen so much? but he crucial states so close know, i went back since 1,972 of the final michigan, pennsylvania, wisconsin polls ever been so tight no, no, they have not. that we have never had a year. what any one of these states was within one point. and this year, john all three of them are within one point. it's a historically close campaign, whether you look at the national polls or
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at the state polls like we just did and i think we just got knighted. >> so you're saying it's close. >> i'm saying it is close harry enten. thank you. thank you, john. >> early voting is already underway in the states and counties across the country. that includes detroit, michigan, cnn's john king went there to hear from michigan autoworkers a closely watched group of voters signs of the season, mccomb county, michigan the suburb just north of detroit, or a blue collar bellwether, joseph knowles about to send a message about to defy his union leadership about to vote republican for president for the first time. about to vote for donald trump at this point. >> now, i'm desperate so i wanting to try anything right now to make sure that i can fulfill my mind responsibility and to take care of my wife and kids. that's all i care about knowles is a union auto worker, one of 1,100 just laid off by stellantis the parent company of chrysler jeep.
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>> he blames corporate greed the most, but doesn't stop there. >> the second lane, i will put it on joe buy in the democratic party. why? >> because of the eb mandates i thought the democratic party was for the working class people that average joe like me that's what i thought there are more american auto jobs now than at any point of the trump presidency. >> but auto workers supporting trump here echo his attacks on biden's clean energy incentives and his claim illegal immigrants are to blame for lost jobs. >> would have you do it the wrong way? i think you should get rounded up and just don't i don't problem with that because it jeopardizes my way of providing for my kids. if they take jobs, knowles waves off friends who called trump racist says he doesn't believe vice president harris is up to the job and he's spars with family members. >> say he should stay a democrat that took it from a mile from my cousins, my
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sister. >> they came at me they'll go be is at 30 plus year union worker at ford and he has this side business cleaning car under bodies when we first visited four months ago, he was a fan of robert kennedy jr. now, he will cast his third ballot for trump rfk joining trump effectively. i couldn't script it any better the way i would like it to be. i love the idea of donald trump being the commander in chief. i love the idea of how donald trump handles the nefarious characters in the world govier believes more than half of uaw members at his ford plant will vote trump. he says harris laughs too much and he can't take her seriously. >> so what is it you're the incumbent who wouldn't do anything different? or are you the underdog that wants change? >> and he says critics take trump to literally, you know, he does it for effect. >> i don't believe that trump really believes someone's eating cats and dogs. i don't believe that he's going to call the national guard out and at
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gunpoint round up every migrant and force them across door border. i don't believe that for a second count, this early vote in wayne county for harris and count on you're in cohn as a democrat who long ago lost patience with ford co-workers shrug off trump's attacks on immigrants, on judges, on vote counts, on critics. >> there's a lot of people that they just take the crazy with trump as it's baked in the cake. and we're just willing to ignore it, wears if we heard that out of our loved ones, we'd be like, okay, grandpa, it's time to take your keys rincon just retired from the wayne assembly plant and its helping the uaw register and turn out voters. she says her june bet that her local would split 50-50 in a trump-biden race. still hello about right. with harris now atop the democratic ticket. but there's a little bit more enthusiasm among some of my female coworkers couple of my male co-workers are pretty ambivalent about harris. we may have lost it hi margin of support because sexism is a real thing. you know, they're just like, you know, i'm not
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sure she can do it. i don't think the country is ready for a female president, walter robinson junior says there's more energy since the switch to harris, but also more offensive chatter on the assembly line. >> they have been saying some very disparaging things about the vice president, things about how she rose up through the ranks and some of the things that she might have done, they only had to say that to me once before they understood but they can't say say that to me again also, they parrot what he what he puts out there and robinson has a side job as a dj and trust he knows how to read the room before i told you about either right now, i would probably say this about 60, 40. i believe that it is very good chance that we the harris ticket, we'll come out on the winning in time to knock on doors and lobby co-workers is running short. labor leaders
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are for harris, but the rank and file are split. michigan's blue collar battle, competitive to the end john king, cnn, wayne, michigan right now, secretary of state antony blinken is in israel meeting with prime minister benjamin netanyahu as the u.s. >> pushes to get ceasefire and hostage release talks back on track. and this morning fubo remains paralyzed by island-wide blackout and a deep economic crisis. how officials are responding to signs of unrest. there. those stories and more before election day. vice president harris bases voters and takes to pressing questions, lie anderson cooper moderates a cnn presidential town hall, kamala harris, tomorrow at nine eastern on cnn these men of means where their silver spoons, what would become of them when it is cover
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right, all stay awake? >> why did trump pulled out of 60 minutes? i love pulling out losing that word by god news for you saturday at nine on cnn state tony blinken is back in the middle east, his 11th trip to the region since the october 7 hamas terror attacks. he's right now meeting with israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu is really officials just releasing this photo of the two at the prime minister there's office in jerusalem, the mission blinken is hoping to find a diplomatic breakthrough, if pot, if it exists still amid the escalating conflicts in gaza and in lebanon, in beirut overnight, more israeli strikes against hezbollah near lebanon's largest public hospital killed at least 13 people. israel at the same time, we know is continuing to plan its retaliation against iran for its unprecedented missile attack on israel earlier this month, joining us right now, retired us army major mike lyons. great to see you he's in israel and before
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he took off, the secretary of state's sent out this tweet maybe outlining the goal here and the mission on my way, israel and other stops to the middle east for intensive discussions about the importance of ending the war in gaza, returning the hostages to their families and alleviating the suffering of the palestinian people that tells you what about the actual immediate mission that you think tony, tony blinken is on right now a lot of aspirational goals, their henry kissinger, like 11th time now, lot of shuttle diplomacy taking place, but he's probably recognizing a ceasefire is not in the offing. >> it doesn't look like that's going to happen so let's see what he could do on the side to get hostages back. but israel is no haven who to negotiate with gaza. and for most right now, so that's a big unknown. there's likely being pressure put on netanyahu administration in order to probably scale back on things as clearly. i think israel is looking at this as a generational opportunity to go against iran when the time comes, have got about two weeks now, obviously, two weeks before the election to do something i think they're going
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to likely take advantage of it. so i think it's maybe one last final warning from the administration from president biden to benjamin netanyahu with regard to what he'd like to see a symptom, do and then also add into this conversation the equation of hezbollah in the north, right? >> you've got hezbollah tried to, tried to launch a missile attack on a military base near tel aviv overnight just today. and also today, israel launched multiple strikes into southern lebanon. that is that the fighting there is not abating, that is not slowing down. just yesterday, the u.s envoy amos hochstein was in beirut and he said, this well, we spent 11 months containing the conflict. we were not able to resolve it. the situation has escalated out of control as we feared that it could. he's talking about in lebanon, right? how dangerous is that situation become? coming in the greater context of what we're discussing right now, just as dangerous as israel is clear, military objectives and that part of the battle to try to move their citizens back in there. they
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claim they've taken about 60% of their rocket capability out. they still have tremendous amount of ability to come, come across support or an attack into israel but israel says it's fighting really a two front war. and that third front will be around when they decided to go and to retaliate for what happened in october 1, there's much more capability in the north from hezbollah. they do have it, and that's why the decapitation strategy there with the pagers walkie-talkies is going to prove out to be a lot more resourceful, a lot more effective because of their inability to really respond back. >> let me ask you something because there's some of the new reporting is that us official has previously hope that a ceasefire in gaza would lead to a separate ceasefire deal between hezbollah and israel. but there's no indication obviously that the war in gaza is slowing or will be ending anytime soon. the reporting now is that the biden administration is instead arguing that the two conflicts be looked at and addressed separately. that means what in terms in terms of israel's approach and the united states approach. now, i'm not sure how
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you can compartmentalize these two. >> israel is fighting this like a superpower with intelligence airstrikes, decapitation strategy is they're going to continue to do that's and they're not going to stop. again, i said before generational opportunity to go after iran now, now that hamas is so weaken as well as hezbollah so to try to compartmentalize, it just doesn't that make a lot of sense? israel looks at this as one big thing, one big fight. >> yeah, i mean, hezbollah began starting this round of attacks right after october 7 and in solidarity with hamas now, the fbi, when you talk about this kind of generational opportunity to take on iran what do you think of this leak investigation that the united states is now leading? the fbi is leading the investigation in our reporting seems to suggest from our colleagues is that they don't seem to think this is any kind of a hack and it was an iranian targeted to hack instead a leak from the inside of highly classified documents that outline israel's plans for a possible potential plans
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for a potential strike on iran how does something like this impact what israel decides to do when it comes to iran, do you think whatever israel does, it will be very creative, likely something maybe we haven't even thought of what they're going to do yet, but this leak is significant. it came from that's a very high level five eyes on it. so i think it's a little bit of a shot across the vowed israel from a warning perspective, one more shot before this election, before they do something. but, but, but israel likely is not documenting a lot of this anyway. so a lot of this intelligence is a little bit maybe of a game that's still being played as israel chooses to respond when they want to respond but again, i think it's more or less this administration trying to put this one final bit of pressure on israel not to escalate. i just don't see it happen. >> yeah. it's great to see you. thanks for coming in john right. >> new this morning in initial toxicology report is out for one direction member, liam payne. what it tells us about but his death and the quest to get younger voters to the
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right under you're knows what's your name again? >> too many projects and insane deadlines sink most renovations. >> the project is three months past the deadline, but this is when allison is that her bets? >> love it. >> just in the windy city rehab. >> all new tonight at 8:00 on hgtv what are you talk about? the news sports a little family, gaza maybe. >> now. you don't do that, right? >> here's another topic for you. >> as they get older, their risk of getting really sick from a respiratory virus, lake fluke covid-19 or rsv goes up a lot so talk to them about
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getting the season's vaccines because you've still got so much to talk about. brought to you by the u.s department of health and human services risk less do more campaign reminding you to get this season's flu and covid-19 vaccines go to cnn.com slash dr. gupta on call or scan the qr code to ask your question this week and it seems like allergy season is an ever-going to end. well, you're kind of right. not only is allergy season is starting earlier, hits lasting longer. so what has changed our dr. sanjay gupta is on collin here to explain why allergy season is far from over even though it should be what is happening here. the leaves are just changing, not all of them have even fallen and people are
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still sneezing yeah, it's, it's kind of remarkable. >> i mean, the number of people i'm running into who are really suffering with fall allergies i mean, fall allergies have always been a thing. ragweed, the primary driver of this. but just as you said, i mean, as the weather changes, it gets warmer outside that first frost is delayed and that's probably the headline here, that first frost being delayed leads to this cascade of events. you have the plants can grow longer. the allergy season starts earlier. and as you point out, it last longer, take this map is fascinating. take a look at this. so this basically shows the change in basically the fall allergy season as a result of the things i just mentioned. cities across america are going to have much longer allergy seasons in reno, for example, 99 days longer. and atlanta where i live 33 days longer up in new york, 21 days longer as that map starts to change over time, we're going to see places that basically are an allergy season. all year long
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look by the end of the century, sara, the prediction is that will have basically 200% higher pollen counts over the next 75 years or so. so it's going to be more pollen out there. and it's going to last longer. one ragweed plant, incidentally, little nugget for you releases about 1 billion grains of pollen. one plant does. so just imagine if those plants grow and they continue to spread for a much longer time. >> i'm trying to wave goodbye to allergy season, but it's not working let some of us don't really, we can't really tell us is this allergies or is this a cold sometimes your eyes are running. how do you tell yeah, it can be challenging and there's a lot of overlapping symptoms here. >> but look, let's put this up on the screen and i can just tell you quickly, when you're thinking about allergies, when you're thinking about viral infections, there are many things that are going to be the same but the things on the right side of the screen, the fever and the full body aches and pains. you may get all the symptoms on the left side of the screen with the viral infection but the fever and the full body aches are going to be
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pretty much indicative of a viral infection. so take your temperature, see how you feel generally if, it's, if it's just the symptoms on the left side of the screen those are probably clear up with allergy medications. but if it's obviously it's a viral infection that might be something you need to treat more aggressively. >> yeah, if your temperature goes up, there is something more going on than allergies, doctor sanjay gupta, it is such a pleasure as always. and of course you all can head to cnn.com to send us your questions on fall allergies. dr. gupta will be back later this week to answer your questions okay. >> we are learning new details about the death of singer liam payne and initial toxic college, your report shows that the former one direction star had cocaine in his system when he fell from the third floor hotel balcony and argentina, that's according to the associated press police also discovered a blister pack of prescription, an anti anxiety drug, and other over-the-counter meds. >> the final toxicology report is not expected for some time authorities do expect though,
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to release payne's body next week. >> so his father can hold a funeral back in england new and troubling video is just in to so the frantic moments after the ferry dock collapsed on georgia's sapelo island. watch for help, many, so many of them in the water, many still hanging onto the walkway after it had fallen into people dove in to help as other started throwing life preservers into the water of seven senior citizens were killed in this tragedy rule others were critically injured they also have video in of a daring rescue in minnesota, a man in crisis ending up a terrifying spot 250 she feet in the air on a radio tower. and now new drone footage is offering perspective on just how scarily high that really was. it took a rescue team about 30 minutes to climb up that tower and then
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safely repel the man down i've never never experienced anything this physical or mentally draining. >> unbelievable that that person was able well, the hold on that long i believe was right after the rescue man was taken to the hospital for evaluation. no word on that. >> the cuban power grid is still no not up and running despite efforts to restore electricity, it has now failed for a fourth time since friday, the blackout made worse by hurricane oscar has left millions struggling to keep, keep food fresh and keep access to water. schools are now closed until thursday. and non-essential workers have been told to stay home >> but in declare, we all found was into clerk we all fan i don't in the club. we are all family so new this morning. >> where are the candidates are going in this final fortnight of the campaign, not just
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physically exactly, but as you saw there campaigning in the key swing state of mind which is tiktok, cnn business writer clare duffy is here. so look, tiktok isn't new exactly. but what's new about it in this election? >> yeah. i mean, beyond just the popularity of tiktok that has exploded, i think these campaigns and political advocacy groups have realized that it's not enough to just be on the platforms. they have to be creating content that feels native to tiktok that speaks the language of its users, especially the young users that are really being targeted with this strategy young users are so used to being sold on social media. they know what that looks like. they're just going to swipe right by it so these groups need to create content that feels entertaining or funny or clever it gives them something a little extra. in addition to that political information. so i think we actually have a good example of this that we can pull up for you for me today, boys? >> carlee thurman,
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25-years-old, turned away from the hospital for an ectopic pregnancy center, reproductive rights file to complaints with the u.s. department of health and human services with violating in town, he's one of his our access to proper health care for their bodies, any food up a truck that was pressed someone a beacon salad. i mean, how many more women have to die before we see a change? >> so that creators video was part of this campaign by the advocacy group gen z for change to raise money for states where abortion rights are on the ballot and we're seeing lots of videos like that where there's skits or their story times, which is another popular format on the app even some dance videos where people will put things that the candidates have said to music and then dance to it as a way of raising awareness of those comments. and i think it's going to be really interesting to see what young voter turnout is like in two weeks. i think we'll get a good sense sense of just how successful the strategy really was you know, it's not enough just to be there as you say, you can't suck. >> i mean, you have to give to put good videos on it. >> yeah. people's attention spans are so short if they don't see something within the first really sort of three to five seconds that they find
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gauging. they're going to swipe right past. and i will say a lot of the success that the campaigns and advocacy groups have had comes because they have hired an empowered gen-z creators to do a lot of this work i used to carry around a quote from barry manilow. this is years before tiktok, but he said, no one was more surprised than me to find out i wasn't hip and i tried to live by that. i mean, don't be surprised if your square, you've got to figure out the sort of the media here before you jump on. clare duffy. thank you. thanks very much for that new our have cnn news central starts now >> the candidates right now battling for every vote before election day, the harris campaign, bringing a big name on the trail star who's going to own the moment when he hits the stage tonight in detroit and a new study reveals a role shifting policies are playing on abortion accessn

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