tv CNN News Central CNN October 25, 2024 10:00am-11:01am PDT
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>> the presidential race raise coming to the lone star state where candidates are putting the spotlight on key issues for their campaigns. now, the lone star state may not be a presidential battleground, but there his, some calculus and strategy here we'll explain as we take you live with the campaign trail. and he's one of former president donald trump's biggest allies and donors, but a new ports is that billionaire elon musk is in regular contact with one of the united states biggest adversaries. >> what we know about his secret conversations with vladimir also this hour, president biden set to apologize to the native american community for the federal government's role in abusive indian boarding schools designed to destroy the native culture. biden says, this apology is long overdue. we're following all these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here. the cnn new central
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much for joining us on the brochure boris sanchez alongside alex marquardt, who's in for brianna keeler the eyes of the country on texas today as both campaigns make a rare visit to the non battleground state, they are focusing on very different issues. vice president kamala harris highlighted reproductive rights at a houston rally tonight. she's going to be joined on stage by some music superstars beyond say, and willie nelson as well. >> in the meantime, for president donald trump is an awesome it's in texas focusing there on immigration and border security. he's gonna be sitting down as well for an interview with the very popular podcaster, joe rogan. and with just 11 days until this election on november 5, cnn's brand new national poll shows a deadlocked race. can see it right there, 47 to 47 for both candidates coming from likely voters. we have a team of correspondents covering today's race for the white house. steve contorno is with the trump campaign in texas, but let's begin with mj lee
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and vice president harris's trip to texas. so mj what can you tell us about about harris going to texas? what she's got plan there why she's going to the state that is not a battleground. >> yeah. as you noted, a texas is not at all a presidential battleground states, but really it comes down to two main reasons why they are holding one of their final rallies of the cycle in the state of texas. >> the first one is just persuasion and the second is getting out the vote. two important things that any campaign has to do in this final stretch, stretch with 11 days to go the campaign does believe that there are some voters that are just starting to pay attention to the race, the winnable, the persuadable voters and with early voting already underway, they believe that reaching some of these voters it's as they are sort of in the middle of their decision-making process. that is going to be a top priority for the campaign. and this is precisely why they've chosen texas as the vice president, is wanting to discuss the issue of reproductive rights. they know that because this is a state
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with one of the most strict abortion bans in the country. they can use this as sort of a symbolic, powerful backdrop for her to make that contrast. and essentially say, look, this is an america that i envision. and in contrast to that, there is donald trump's america where thanks to him, some of these abortion bans were able to go into play and that's also why we're going to see some of these families that the campaign stories they want to promote, they're going to be onstage speaking about what they say are some of these devastating experiences they have gone through because of these bands. and we know that that is actually going to sound pretty familiar if you have been watching some of the more recent harris ads, take a look 54 years they were trying to get roe v wade terminated. >> and i did it. >> he did it it was pretty devastating. >> he is bragging, talking about the rights that he stole from american women and trump is promising to do more and
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that second really important goal of getting out the vote. >> that's obviously where beyonce comes in not the only celebrity that the campaign has been leaning on in this final stretch. they're hoping that that is going to turn into eyeballs and that it is going to convince some people that participating in this election is going to be worth it. >> you're having that kind of stuff more power helps to sort of nationalize the attention that, that event is going to get mj. thank you so much. let's go to steve contorno, who is in texas with a trump campaign for us steve, the former president, is actually set to speak to reporters at any moment now, what are we expecting him to focus on? >> well, there are two elements at play here that explain why he is spending this time in texas so closely, election one is logistical. donald trump will be recording an appearance on the joe rogan podcast, which is based in austin. so that is a reason why he is here today. but look, there's also some gamesmanship at play. donald trump's campaigns saw that vice president harris was
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holding a rally in texas on this date and they said, look, if she's going to come here, we want heard if be forced to answer questions about the top issue that they see facing this country. and that is immigration. so that is what he will be discussing when he takes the stage right behind me, just moments from now, trump preview those remarks that he will deliver yesterday when he was in tempe, arizona. take a listen to what he said were dumping ground where like it we're like a garbage can for the world that's why it's happened. >> that's what's happened were like a garbage can you know, it's the first time i've ever said that and every time i come up and talk about what they've done to our country, i get aid inquiry or an angry first time i've ever said garbage can, but you know what is a very accurate description say that he intends to engage one of the largest novae largest active deportations in
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american history. >> some of the signs behind me say deport, illegals. now his running mate, jd vance, recently suggested that that would include dreamers as well. that is those whose came here as children to undocumented individual. so just a sense of what is at stake and what they are putting forward in this election. in these final days, donald trump really believes that the top issue facing this country, and he is making sure voters know that going into this election cycle, cycle back to you bros steve contorno thank you so much for going to stick. isn't it? yeah think so with 11 days to go until the election, brand new polling continues to show an extremely tight race cnn's harry enten joins us now to run the numbers as he often does for us. harry, what are you seeing in the newest polls? >> boris, let me just say brianna has really changed in the last 24 hours. i don't know what the heck is going on there but what discuss that afterwards anyway, look, we had our new cnn poll, right? that had a tie between the two of them. that is part of a larger
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pattern that we are seeing across the data right now. so this is harris versus trump national margin. you know, we got the cnn poll showed a tie that matches the new york times poll out this morning also showed a tie. if you like, donald trump, look, the war hello street journal has him up by three, like kamala harris, maybe you prefer ipsos or say 24, that's a bunch of academics working with hugo that also has harris up by three. but the bottom line is that this race is very, very close circling right around a tie in the national vote. and indeed that is so much different. from what we saw, either four or eight years ago in elections involving donald trump. so let's take a look at the trump versus democrat margin on october 25, right now, harris is averaging about a point advantage in the national polls four years ago at this point, jill biden was so far ahead, he was up by nine. hillary clinton was also pretty far ahead at this point in 2016 she was up by six and keep in mind, no republican has won the popular vote since george w bush back in 2004. these polls, and the average of polls really does raise the
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possibility not just that donald trump could win in the electoral college, but he could potentially win the popular vote be the first republican in 20 years. of course, we'll have to wait and see on that and harry, we've seen extraordinary amounts of money spent in this election. so much of that on advertising, on negative advertising each candidate has been the subject of that. how do you think that's impacting their favourability yeah, it's not good it's not good. >> let's take a look at the net favorable ratings for kamala harris and donald trump. you go back last month in september, according nor cnn poll, it was minus four points for kamala harris. look at this. now, she's down to a -11 point net favorability rating that is 11 percentage points. more of the public has an unfavorable than favorable view of her lockdown trump's always been underwater on this metric. he was at -12 back in september. now, he's at -13. so the gap between the two of them has absolutely closed. now, this is well within the margin for harris was considerably more popular than trump back in september. today, it's basically a dead heat. turns out there's a good chunk
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of the public that likes neither kamala harris nor donald trump yeah, it's tough for any sitting politician at this point in american history to have a very positive reading. and to that point, harry looking at the current president and his negative approval rating, how might that potentially impact the race? >> yeah. when you look at a metric like this, i mean, look at joe biden's approval rating if we could get this to go there we go. joe biden's job as president approved just 36 percent, my goodness, gracious. you can't really get quite lower than that given the partisanship and polarization that we have at this point disapproval rating 64% wolf, well above 60%. you look back through history and guys, you know, i love looking back through history. so let's look back through history. was the successor of the same party pre-election net approval ratings. look at harry truman when he had a net negative approval rating, 52, was he succeeded by a democrat? know how about in 68 lyndon baines johnson was he succeeded by a
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democrat? know of course where it should nixon won that election, george w bush in 2008 was he succeeded by a democrat know, can joe biden? actually be succeeded by a democrat? can kamala harris overcome joe biden's net negative approval rating? only time will tell, but history ain't so kind guys we know you love looking back through history, but you're definitely, i'm bianna a lot more in the coming days asking being asked to look ford into your crystal ball. harry enten. thank you so much for breaking down those numbers and joining us now to discuss are our senior cnn political analyst, gloria borger, and mark preston thanks both for being here. let's let's go back with the bros you can't just say sum before we start this whole real big discussion. thank god that gloria is here to break through this they draw that my softer side. is being her wing person. we'd didn't we didn't give credit to evan perez, who coined this term. >> and i think you were going to blow up, shut up his an our spot today, but he did right out of the day let's talk
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about texas mj touched touched on it briefly, but what do you make of both candidates going to texas is it a smart move when that state is firmly in the trump case? colum, what can they get out of it? >> well, for her, i think in terms of the question of abortion, its ground zero you know, it's got one of the strictest abortion laws in the country, no exceptions for rape or incest and it gives her an opportunity to stand there and talk to these women who are who are going to be there on stage, apparently. and let the american public know the stakes here in this abortion question and that will get amplified. you know, you just don't go somewhere anymore. >> talked to a local tv outlet or newspaper and then expected to get local press. >> now, you go on podcasts us and that's why trump is there to go on. joe rogan and it gets amplified. and there's an echo chamber. and that's what she's doing it for its kind of the background. she's got a good point to be there. >> it strikes me mark that to
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what gloria just said, that you don't really have candidates going to local markets that dominate the way that they used to in the discourse of a certain geographic area that both of these candidates are trying to appeal to their base and they're not sincerely doing it by reaching out to folks with the exception of kamala harris a few days ago in pennsylvania of folks that aren't already in their camp, right? like beyonce is not going to drive a ton of republicans toward kamala harris and a ton of democrats aren't listening to joe rogan. so what's the strategy in that regard is there while looking world we're looking at a handful of states right now. we're looking at about six states that are going to determine the election. and within those six days, we're only looking at a very small group of people who are going to determine that election and when you look at kamala harris, for instance, and we talked about this or at least people started talking about this huge media blitz that she was on. she wasn't really on a big media blitz. she was reaching out two podcasts into favorable media, call her daddy, right? she reaching out to young women
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beyonce tonight, bianna say tonight, her message is not for, for houstonians. her message is to talk to to folks in michigan and wisconsin and the commonwealth of pennsylvania and georgia, and try to get those last few women who may be, you know, on the edge of but supporting kamala harris, but actually going out and voting for kamala harris, going and willing to devote a couple of hours. and that's what we've seen in these closure. >> there's a bit of a problem here that democrats that i talked to her a little worried about because you can be with her on the abortion issue but split your ticket and decide not to go with her in the presidential campaign. i mean, in missouri for example josh hawley is likely to win. there's some valid issue there, and he's very anti-abortion. so, you know, people are splitting tickets here. and what she's trying to say is vote for me because this is important to you. >> yeah, i also wanted to get your perspective, gloria, on donald trump talking about the united states being a garbage can a shining city on a hill
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that is not i didn't know we were one of those s-hole countries. you know, that he spoke about when he was in office, that again, i'm sorry these apocalyptic terms. and i've never heard of presidential candidate. am i don't know if you have a go out there and degrade the and demean his own country so much. and it's remarkable that he gets such a positive response from his supporters because he's campaign is based on grievance, even about america what do you make of that? >> i mean, it doesn't seem like there's any other candidate in either party who could necessarily get away with it, right? >> like, i mean, i hate to say this, but he's ripped the band aid off aulet. people say, donald trump has been the worst thing has happened to america has been the worst thing to happen to politics what i would say in response to that is that donald trump may be the worst thing happened to american. maybe the word we've seen happen in politics. i have no idea, but what i do know is that he is certainly lifted the
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cloud or the veil of secrecy that you once existed between you and your neighbor. you know who your neighbors supports for president. now, you see people who are willing to just attack each other, who used to be friends. you see families broken up now over this all because we really aren't this united states of america were very divided. >> but an interesting thing in our poll is that i think more than half of voters said that trump's demeanor was a reason not to support him it really is striking that there is a receptive audience for someone who says that the united states is a garbage can. there was something else that i found interesting. this is out of the in new york times poll. it finds that harris has narrowed the gap on the number one issue that voters say is top of mind when it comes to the selection. and that's the economy. i believe we might have a graph thick of it. trump was leading by 13. he's now leading by only six points. how significant is that well, i think it's i think it's important. >> she's not over surpassed him on the economy, but she's
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got a strong headwind because seven out of ten voters in this country think that we're headed in the wrong direction. and that's a real problem for her biden is usually unpopular. and so she's got these headwinds that are very difficult to manage usually been an incumbent it is to be in a strong position in this case, it's not necessarily a strong position for her. there's another remarkable figure, more than 30 million people have already cast their votes in early voting polling that we've seen finds that harris has likely gotten more votes than trump at this point. so how much movement can there be in the next week and-a-half, given that more than 30 million people have already voted, well, i think traditionally, i mean democrats have been better at getting the early vote out. okay, so traditionally that has happened. republicans had started to try to make a move towards that. donald trump tried to stop that. remember, saying it has to be a day of we don't really know yet what we can tell you though. we're not going to know who won the election on election night. i mean, i would i would very much
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doubt that happening hang on for days for anything you don't change the channel because so we'll be here live bringing you the very latest details, bit of a plug. there in the show lots of cops always lavas back after this morning. thank you both so much. >> still plenty more news to come on. news central, we're re standing by live in texas where as we noted, any minute, former president trump is scheduled to speak to the press in austin. his appearance it comes as another woman, this time a former sports illustrated swimsuit model has accused trump of groping her in the 19 stacey williams giving a deal detailed account of the incident to cnn. you'll hear her story in her own words. >> plus an attorney for lyle and erik menendez says that he hopes the brothers will be released from prison and before thanksgiving, as the la's district attorney files
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>> so what about us now? >> luckily, i'm pretty adorable there's no safe likes simply safe l man, a hot dog is not a sandwich. >> between brad, can i weigh in on this debate with department of agriculture generally defined sandwiches has meet between bread or a ban what about subs? give me no way billionaire tech mogul, elon musk has been in regular contact with russian president vladimir putin since 2022. >> that's according to new reporting from the wall street journal the journal confirmed that the talks took place by confirming those with several current and former us european, and russian officials. now, elon musk did not respond to requests for comment and a kremlin spokesperson told the wall street journal that the only communication that musk he had with the kremlin was one phone call where musk and putin discussed, quote, space, as well as current and future technologies. musk works very
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closely with the u.s. government on a number of different national security and space projects. he has also, of course, risen as a major figure in president, former president donald trump's campaign and new filings show that musk has poured 119 million into his own pro-trump super pac spending nearly 44 million this month alone. and yesterday, he again warded to new $1 million prizes to registered voters in both michigan and wisconsin, despite by the fact that the justice department had already warned that those payments may be illegal. i want to bring in russia and cyber expert dimitri alperovitch. he is the chairman of silverado policy accelerator a geopolitics think-tank to retrieve. thank you so much for being with us. i know that you've got some questions about this contact between putin and moscow. we did note that the kremlin said there's only been this one call back in 2022 but break down for us if you will. the concern that national security officials
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would have here in washington, if those conversations did indeed take place? >> thanks, alex, as you said, we don't know if this is true kremlin is denying i think in the past masks, musk has denied it, but look, as a private citizen, he can certainly talk to whomever he wants to. he has freedom of speech rights under the constitution. but he's not just a private citizen. he also says that he has a top-secret government clearance he's of course, a major contract with the u.s. government to nasa to an a row and the national reconnaissance agency that sends up satellites into space to the space force. and when you have a security clearance, typically you are obligated to report any context. you have a foreign governments and certainly with foreign intelligence and foreign government leaders so if he hasn't done that and there id these contacts, he could be in serious trouble and they might certainly question him about this and if you're not telling the truth to the us government officials, to law enforcement officials that creates other criminal problems for you and he's been quite dismissive of
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his security clearance saying that in fact, what he sees is really quite boring, but you and i both know how protective us officials are about classified information expanded dimitri, if you will, on the reliance that the united states has on musk, whether it's dod or nasa to help them out in space, how important is he to the u.s. >> government? >> oh, he's absolutely essential. and look, we have to give him credit because what he has done, particularly with spacex, is absolutely astonishing, being able to create these reusable rockets that dramatically exponentially reduce the cost of lift into space, allowed us to get back into the international space station on us rockets for the first time in decades since retired, the space shuttle really, really fundamental. so being able to fly, fly cheaply into space, we rely on him on that, but also with starlink, which is this incredible low-earth orbit satellite communications network. he has created that is providing communication services not just
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to consumers, but you've government agencies as you well know, alex these are essential to ukraine, in particular because they really could not prosecute this war without starlink dmytro, we've just gotten a note that the white house says that they are not in a position to corroborate this report in the wall street journal about this contact? >> like between musk and putin, dmitry, before i let you go, i want to ask you about the, the all the money that musk is donating two trump. we noted $120 million to that super pac. what more do you think? that must could get out of a trump administration that he hasn't already with all these contracts under the biden administration well, i think you know, as we know, trump is considering put him in charge of a government efficiency commission and certainly given the trajectory of where spacex is going, given that they probably getting, get more competition from companies like amazon, they are setting up
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their own satellite constellations into space and blue origin from jeff bezos, building their own rockets certainly been closer to you as government whichever administration is going to be very helpful to elon musk yeah and i think you're absolutely right to point out that the importance of starlink satellite internet company that that he started but up hugely important in ukraine and elsewhere, which gives him frankly, a huge amount of sway over the countries in the places that he puts it in place dimitri alperovitch, thank you so much. your thoughts today. >> thanks. around me. >> and still ahead this hour on cnn news central, we are live in austin, texas, where former president donald trump is expected to hold a precedent ben, any minute. we also have reporters on the ground in arizona where president joe biden will be addressing the native american community and apologizing for hundreds of federally on boarding schools which writ thousands of native american children away from their families. over 150 years
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say and why is this happening now biden is expected to make this historic apology to the native american community for the u.s government's role in these indian boarding schools that forced thousands of native american children to be removed from their families and assimilate, been stripped of many ties to their core cultures. >> now this took place over a period of 150 years, where thousands of children, some as young as 4-years-old were taken from their families and put into these boarding schools. they were stripped of their tribal ties and cultural practices with many of them enduring abuse, neglect, and some even suffering bring from death. now president biden said that this is a long overdue apology for the community and it stems from a review that was ordered by a secretary, deb haaland who is speaking behind me. i had called for review of these practices. ultimately, they found there were at least
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400 schools across 37 states with nearly 1,000 children who had died they ultimately have been able to identify so far about 18,000 are children who were part of these squirrels. but the federal government acknowledges that there could likely be many, many more. now, deb haaland, who is the first native american to serve as a cabinet secretary, her own family has history, went through some of these federal boarding schools. she said, long ago, it was farfetched the idea that the u.s. government apologize for this. but today that is what president biden, in fact, will be doing the first recommendation from this review from the interior department called for a formal apology. for this community. it comes at a time, just less than two weeks from the election when that the administration, the campaign are also trying to show some of the work they are doing for the native american community, which makes up an important putin slice of the electorate here in arizona for president biden today he is trying to take some steps, trying to turn the chapter from
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what was a very painful and dark period in the u.s especially for the native american community, and we'll be listening in for the president's remarks set to start at any moment arlette saenz, live for us in arizona. thank you so much this just in to cnn, we've just learned that the wall washington post will not be making a presidential endorsement in this year's race. the move breaking with decades of tradition at the newspaper, seen as media correspondent hadas gold joins us now with more hadas. this is quite a moment. what more do we know about the post? it's decision. >> this is quite a moment. this was announced today by the washington post publisher will lewis, saying that we recognize this will be read in a range of weights, saying including as a tacit endorsement of one candidate or the condemnation of another organ abdication of responsibility. but he says, we don't see it that way. we see it as consistent stay with the bellies, the post has always stood for, as you noted, the post has been endorsing for decades, really since the 1970s in 1998, they sort of did a non-endorsement, but this has been a tradition now that they are breaking for decades and i now have reporting according to sources knowledge that actually
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the post editorial board did have an endorsement drafted for the vice president. for vice president kamala harris, and that is the endorsement that would now potentially not be running. i'm also toward told by a source the knowledge that many on the editorial board are surprised and angry with this decision. some were also questioning the timing of this. i spoke to another source who said it's fine that the post is not endorsing, but why are they making this morning making this announcement so close to the selection, the timing is just terrible. i'm told we are getting some very harsh criticism from some very high places. this is the former washington post editor, marty baron posting shortly after this announcement, announcement was publish saying this is cowardice with democracy as its casualty, donald trump will see this as an invitation to further intimidate owner jeff bezos and others, disturbing spinelessness at an institution famed for courage. i'm still getting a lot of doing a lot of reporting on this, talking to people at the washington post the big question of course, is going to be the reaction within the newsroom. i'm also told there could be resignations as
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a result of this non-endorsement decision that is quite the condemnation from marty baron, who is not just extremely well regarded in that newsroom, but across the industry. >> and it is going to raise major questions to his point about any kind of pressure that the owner, jeff bezos, is ceiling hadas gold. thank you for bringing us that breaking news and all of your reporting still ahead. a former model sits down with cnn describing an alleged incident that she claims happened more than 30 years ago with former president donald trump her allegations and why she's speaking out now, that's right after this you'll want to answer a astute political analysis. you have questions au biden said, the right, both stayed awake why did trump pulled out of 60 minutes? i love bullet but now, losing that network, of i got news for you tomorrow with nine on cnn can to reeva's support your brain health. know a janet, hey eddie know fraser,
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in front of me. >> he pulled me into him and his hands were just on man, didn't come off former sports illustrated models. >> dc william says that donald trump groped her more than 30 years ago in trump tower with a later convicted sex offender, jeffrey epstein, watching and smiling in the room as it happened then the hands started moving and they were on the, you know, on the side of my breasts, on my hips, back down to my butt, back up, sort of then you know, they were just on me the whole time and i
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spoken out about the incident extensively until now in her first on-camera interview, she tells cnn the most detailed accounting of the incident, yet alleging that in 1993, epstein, who she was briefly dating at the time, broader into trump tower and just had this really like sickening feeling that it was coordinated, that somehow the whole thing was i was rolled in there like a piece of meat for some kind of weird twisted game. >> soon after the encounter, she severed ties with epstein and said she was unaware of the kind of predatory behavior that would come to light in later years. she also says she received this undated postcard from trump delivered to her modeling agency he by courier shortly after the incident, stacy, your home away from home, love donald. >> i felt sick to my stomach. >> williams says she did not
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tell anyone about the incident for over ten years. >> i felt a wave of shame and i just couldn't think about it. face it, talk about it for a very long time. >> the trump campaign has denied williams is allegations calling it a fake story, contrived by kamala harris. this campaign, williams account only adding to the lengthy list of women who have alleged that trump groped, kissed, or assaulted them. trump has also denied those allegations. trump, who was close friends with epstein once calling him a terrific guy, has long sought to publicly distance himself from epstein since he first face charges related to inappropriate sexual conduct with under age girls in the mid 2000s, i was not a fan of jeffrey epstein. >> williams has been engaged as a democratic volunteer for decades and shared her story on a zoom call on monday at a survivors for kamala event with the election less than two weeks away, williams arguing that her decision to speak out now was not driven by the
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presidential campaign, but with the release this week of a documentary about sports illustrated, once you participate did in two years ago, during which she briefly alluded to the incident, what do you say to those critics say this is politically motivated? >> i can't control when that documentary comes out. i can't control the fact that it's premiering two weeks before the election, and she says she could not stay silent any longer. it takes a lot of you have to really prepare yourself to be ready for that onslaught. and i'm ready now, just bring it. >> despite her saying that this timing speaking out. now about this so close to the election is coincidental in our interview, she does make very clear her support for harris, in addition to not wanting thank to see trump retake the white house, for us and alex all right. >> our thanks to sunlen serfaty for that report and we should note the trump campaign has just released an additional statements saying that the handwriting john, that postcard that you just saw in sunlen's package, there is not donald
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trump's. we want to take you out to arizona where president joe biden has just started speaking. he's gonna be apologizing to native american community for america's role in forcing indigenous children into boarding, indian boarding schools over 100 over 150 year period. let's listen when i became president having administration look like america, except you're america. >> and there's never has been never has been a native american indigenous person was on the cabinet or are in the secretary or any consequences the job in a presidential administration she's the first it's clearly not the last. native american cabinet secretary leadership to strengthen eraser between tribal nations and the federal government is unlike anything ever happened before that's why we're here today. you know what i got to the senate. i was only
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29-years-old. i had to wait 17 days to be eligible and i had after i got elected, what be while always waiting, my wife and daughter were killed. my two boys were bad the injured, and a guy that came to my assistants was a guy named dan, no way. the first thing he taught me not a joke was joe it is not indians. it's indian nations indian know, i'm serious. deadly, earnest about it it's been ten years since the city fred president came in visit indian country as simply much too long that's why i'm here today, not only to fulfill my promise, the president is first president visited a new country, but more importantly to right or wrong? to chart a new path toward a better future for us. all i'm also today because as i said, i wife jill has been here ten times and then he country literally first-aid, he sends her love
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and says, joe makes you come home because every time she goes, she spent a lot of time in those excuse me for saying this to navajo nation, i'm worried worried he's not coming home i watched that beautiful performance just now moved me deeply to reminder a very, the native people enjoy an employee sicker traditions culture passed down over thousands and thousands of years long before there was the united states native communities flourished on his lands at practice, democratic government. before we ever heard of it develop advanced agriculture but eventually, united states is established and began expanding energy treaty. the sovereign tribal nations but as time moved on respect for
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science, for tribal sovereignty evaporated was shattered pushing it to be off their homelands, denying, denying their humanity and their rights try it, and children to cut the connection to their ancestors and their inheritance in a heritage at first in the ninth 1800s you ever was voluntary asking him tribes to sell their children, to send their children away to vocational schools. but then, then the federal government mandated mandated removal of children from their families and tribes launching what's called the federal indian boarding school era, era over 150 years spent 150 years ago, early 1800s, 18, 70 to 1971 of those terrific chapters in american history it should be ashamed. a chapter that most americans don't know about. the vast majority don't even know about it i was about
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hotel today. i told the hotel staff are leaving. it's where you go. i told him that. so what you do? and i told them they said they're natives here. they said, i never knew that i never knew that. think of how many people don't know as president i believe is imperative important that we do know now, generations of native children stolen taken away to places they didn't know what people they never met who spoke a language they had never heard native, community silenced their children's laughter in play were gone children would arrive at schools to closed, taken off there. hair that they were told was sacred was chopped off. their names literally erased. i placed by a number or in english name once survival later recounted her days when taken away, she said, quote, my mother, standing on
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that sidewalk as we loaded into agreeing bus i can see the image of my mom burned into my mind and my heart where she was crying another survivor described what it was like at the boarding school. i quote when i talk to my travel language, i would get hit i lost my tongue they beat me every day children abused, emotionally, physically, and sexually abused forced into hard labor some put up for adoption without the consent of their birth. parents so i've left, for, dead and unmarked graves. and for those who did return home there are wounded body and spirit trauma and shame passed down through generations the policy continued even after the civil rights act, which got me
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involved in politics is the young man, even after the civil rights act was passed in 1964, it continued all told, hundreds and hundreds of federal indian boarding schools across the country tens of thousands native children enter the system nearly 1,000 documented native child deaths are the real number is likely to be much, much higher lost generations culture and language lost, trust it's horribly, horribly wrong to sit on our sole. i like to ask with your permission for a moment of silence because remember those lost and the generations living with that trauma
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united states governed eventually stop the program but the federal government has never, never formally apologize for what happened until today. ai formally apologize as president united states america or we ai formally apologize school. i'd have tribal school and arizona a community full of tradition and culture and joined by survivors of the senators to do just that. apologize, apologize, apolla. rewrite history books correctly i have a solemn responsibility to be the first president to formally apologize to the native peoples native americans, native hawaiians native alaskans in federal indian boarding schools as long long, long overdue quite
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frankly, there's no excuse for this apology took 50 years to make federal indian boarding school policy. the pain it has caused always be a significant mark of shame. >> a blot in american history for too long. this all happened with virtually no public attention books not taught in our schools lot of incidents of people being killed there is a lot of innocent people being killed when asked to stop
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this period it was ten in fratis president biden formally apologizing, saying i formally apologize for the united states role in this program that for 150 years took young native american children and sent them to boarding schools sponsored by the federal government. they're biden recounting personal stories of survivors of that ugly chapter as he described it in american history this his first trip to indian country as a sitting president and notably alleys at the end there he was met with a protester calling out to the president demanding more action on the middle east, specifically in gaza yeah i'm saying free palestine and talking about all the civilian deaths, which she did acknowledge in this truly historic moment, noting that this was the first apology to the native american community
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for this system of children being stolen from their families and put into these schools for 150 years. >> we're going to take a quick break. we'll be right back. stay with us nutrients to help fill those holes. >> your immune system on hold supporting nutrients are most complete support yet prescription drug plan, annual enrollment period is now open. every year. >> i have to listen to all these commercials. >> we're sorry, we know it's annoying, but we want to make sure everyone on medicare knows it's time to check and see if they can enroll in a plan that will save money or include additional benefits i just want these commercials to stop honestly, we do to, but this is the only time of year when
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