tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN October 27, 2024 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT
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>> i'm michael holmes. appreciate your company coming up here on cnn dark rhetoric via mongering offensive jokes and wise of donald trump rally in new york city. sets of worrisome drone. as we approach the final week before election day in the u.s a new round of gaza ceasefire and hostage release talks kicks off in doha for the first time in two months plus gender reform in the catholic church. how women are pressuring the pope for decision-making roles in the church >> this is cnn newsroom with michael holmes well, with eight days left, the u.s us presidential race is entering the final stretch more than 40 million people have already cast their ballots early voting underway in most states now cnn's latest national polling average shows little to no daylight between kamala harris and donald trump. >> it's a busy week.
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understandably for both candidates says campaigns blitz across the handful of battleground states expected to decide the election on sunday, thousands of people queued up outside new york's legendary madison square garden for a trump campaign rally. the gathering featured a slate of trump loyalists and included racist profane attacks against kamala harris, hillary clinton, other democratic leaders, and even the island of puerto rico in a rare campaign appearance, melania trump introduced her husband to the crowd during his, as usual, disjointed and meandering speech. the former president use dark rhetoric and invoked fear when talking about democrats, women, and immigrants, and made a slew of false claims about his opponent kamala harris has orchestrated the most egregious betrayal than any leader in american history has ever inflicted upon
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our people she has violated her oath, eradicated our sovereign border and unleash an army of migrant gangs who are waging a campaign of violence and terror against our citizens. >> there has never been anything like it anywhere in the world for any country overall, trump painted a bleak and frequently dishonest picture of the us our kristen holmes was there and has more spoke to a packed house at madison square garden in new york, giving what was his traditional campaign where you spill quite a few falses? >> take you live when it came to immigration, just to go over a few of the things that he said. he talked about, the fact that rebuttal migrants and pouring in across the border from prisons and sales violence, just to be clear, let's thanks, cnn is back on a number of occasions and valley even the campaign couldn't give any examples of that happening. >> he talked about how that is whelan games were taking over all of america. and in
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particular, a war colorado, i will say as somebody who was with him in that rally at aurora, colorado, there was an incident at an apartment complex in aurora, colorado spoken to a number of state and local officials who have said that it was completely blown out of proportion. actually, the rhetoric around it was creating more problems for the community. he also talked about immigration in general and springfield still to illinois saying that a load of illegal immigrants were dropped into springfield, illinois. one thing we can say, or excuse me, springfield, ohio, one thing we can say that we know that most of the people who are on the ground in greenfield are here legally through a specific program, the department of homeland security in addition to that, he talked about the hurricane response do helene it's something that he's talked about a lot saying that there were no federal officials on the ground, that no one was could be seen. nobody was helping that. >> we know not to be true for both republicans and democrats on the ground who have described it as a helpful response, particularly the federal response.
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>> he also said that fiba didn't have enough money help with disaster response. they do because they had moved all of their money to help with migrant housing. that is not on truth, fema has multiple pots of money, one of them is for disaster earlier another is for migrant housing. >> but it's a congressional allotment, meaning that that money for migrant housing cannot be taken at us disaster relief. >> and same not, vice versa. so the other thing that he talks about foreign policy, and he said without any evidence or proof that neither russia would have embedded crane. was he an office or yes october 7 terror attacks in israel, they said they both lose things would have never happened. >> if he was in office, but all in all, it was his traditional campaign speech and i will say that despite using this dark fear-based rhetoric on immigration the crowd here, a full house at madison square garden, was incredibly receptive to this rhetoric is unsurprising that, oh, we learned that donald trump, who believes that this it's kind of rhetoric helped propel him to the white house in 2016 is also the belief that a good help him
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again in 2024. and if you base it just on this ground tonight, he might have a point. people were standing up, they were using applause lines for several of these various points. >> the dark is point i came to immigration. now, one thing i do just want to quickly point out is what happened before the rally, because somebody who is attended dozens of these he's trump rallies the pre-show rhetoric before donald trump took the stage with some of the darkest rhetoric i've ever heard at one of these rallies. they were name calling. i just want to point out some of the things that we heard from these speakers ahead of time. what person called kamala harris? the anti-christ and the devil. another person said referred to puerto rico as a floating island of garbage, something that has received massive backlash from both democrats and republicans another person referred to elite you'll immigrants as effing illegals. someone else said hillary clinton was a quote sick and that is just the actual specifics we also heard a lot of nativist rhetoric talking about how america is for americans only and that type of thing it is clear that this is
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the tone donald trump's team, donald trump's campaign is setting because keep in mind what this event was. this was the kickoff of the final week of the campaign before voters head to the polls. >> on november 5 kristen holmes cnn new york the trump campaign's messaging during this rally was in line with what we've been hearing throughout the presidential race is more now from cnn's dana bash donald trump has always wanted to quote, unquote, play mike madison square garden that's what he's doing right now but he's doing it as somebody who is continuing to stoke the fears, play on the anger and just flat-out lie hi over and over and over again in order to whip up people who he, first of all, needs to vote but also people
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who are entertained by this kind of rhetoric. >> i mean, let's just be blunt about it. and you haven't entire iconic arena, madison square garden, that is still with people there to listen to this kind of thing i just want to give one example of something that fell flat out. this is not something that he said that this is part of the opening acts. >> there's a lot going on like, i don't know if you guys know this, but there's literally a floating island of garbage in the middle of the ocean right now yeah, i think it's called puerto rico republicans or at least attempt to clean up by republicans who are relying on big portions of the who have big portions of puerto rican voters who they rely on. like for example, rick
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scott, republican senator from florida he tweeted something trying to separate himself, but suggested that it was a joke that didn't land. i don't see any evidence that the joke didn't land. i think that there was there was a lot of laughs sadly, too that horrible, horrible joke on the democratic side john fetterman tweeted from the very important state of pennsylvania that there are half 1 million puerto rican voters, three-quarters of whom are able to vote. and that's not going to land well with them. so listen, i mean, i think the most important thing to understand is that as kristen is saying, is you have said, as we have told our viewers over and over again this is not the kind of rhetoric that is new for him. >> the trump campaign now distancing itself from that comment, congresswoman andrea alexandria ocasio-cortez, who is all whether he can to
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descent, blasted the remark here she is during an online conversation with democratic vice presidential nominee tim walz i mean, it's like super upset. obviously, it's super certain me and my family's from puerto rico. i'm breaking i need people to understand that when when you have some a whole calling puerto rico, floating garbage know that that's what they think about you there are hundreds of thousands of puerto rican across in battleground states that need to send them a message on this. i want them to like well, while donald trump focused on the massive crowd in new york, kamala harris took more of a grassroots approach to campaigning sunday. >> she spent the day in the battleground state of pennsylvania visiting several philadelphia neighborhoods to push a message of unity cnn's priscilla alvarez reports vice
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president kamala harris on sunday visiting battleground, pennsylvania. as he tries to mobilize voters in the final push through election day vice president blitzing around the philadelphia area over the course of the day is starting with a church service for up with dominantly black church than a barbershop followed by a bookstore. and then a port. are we you can restaurant all of that intended to corp black and latino voters as her team tries to walk in, her coalition. but similarly, they are trying to fortify the blue wall all which includes pennsylvania, wisconsin, and michigan. what her team sees as the most favorable path to 270 electoral votes. and here at a community center in philadelphia, the vice president stressing the stakes of the election, saying it is. but one of the most consequential elections of our lifetime. and then also talking about some of the broader case her campaign around unity, saying that her team has been trying to build a broad coalition to unify americans. now the vice president also speaking directly to young voters but here's and young leaders and then urging those
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in the crowd to vote and encouraged goes around them to do the same. noting that pennsylvania holds extra significance if against is the path to victory. >> i'm very excited about the reports that we're getting about enthusiasm here philadelphia and to your point, philadelphia is a very important part of our path to victory. and it is the reason i'm spending time here had been spending time here, but i'm feeling very optimistic about the enthusiasm that is here and the commitment that folks of every background have to vote and to really invest in the future of our country now sunday's stop in pennsylvania are multiple stops in pennsylvania will kick off a blitz over the course of the week as ahead of election day as her and her team tried to hit all the battleground states and shore up support this all alvarez, cnn philadelphia donald trump's running mate is insisting former us president's enemy from within
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comments, not directed a political rivals. trump has used that term frequently most recently, suggesting using the military to handle what he called the enemy from within on election day vance defended trump in this exchange with cnn's jake tapper about donald trump and what he said? >> yes and no but trump said and you'd much rather talk about what donald trump allegedly said when publicly did in autism and what he this jail. but he says publicly 0.5%. and then we'll let terry to go after the enemy within which is the american people. he did not say that jake enemy. we said that he was going to send the military after the american people show me the quote where he said he was going to, he said the enemy within far left lunatics, he's trying about the rioting and share. he's talking about people rioting after the election all right, let's bring in ron brownstein, cnn senior political analyst and senior editor at the atlantic.
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>> good to see iran i think that donald trump rally was quite something i mean, i watched it. i mean, a quote, unquote comedian calling puerto rico a pile of garbage and other speaker spoke about what it said he spoke at what he called a nazi rally. kamala harris being called the anti-christ, and that was before trump spoke and we know what he said. who is the trump campaign trying to appeal to literally days out from the election? >> i mean, you know, the two precedence of this kind of rally was george wallace in 1968, which is what going in. i imagined it might be like, but of course the darker, more distant precedent was the 1939 nazi rally. pro, pro-nazi rally at madison square garden, which it may have had more overlap with in the end. i mean, trump is all in on trying to mobilize the voters who are most alienated from the way america is evolving, changing
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demography, changing cultural norms, changing relationships between men and women same time, he is counting on unprecedented support among latino and black voters who are the targets for much of this rhetoric. and indeed for a very sharp edge policies like mass deportation and national stop and frisk. and what you see tonight, i thought was the inherent tension there may be coming to point with all of the backlash in particular in response to those comments about puerto rico and the parade of a puerto rican celebrities, the precession of puerto rican celebrities who came out tonight in support of harris, which could be a critical factor interestingly enough, in pennsylvania yeah. which still seems to me that tipping point state in this election, 500,000. >> i think i put a rican voters in, pennsylvania. i'm kamala harris more and more focusing on trump's extreme comments, but also his cognition. and so
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on. is that smart tactically, is that going to win people over? >> well, you know, someone said to me many months ago before biden got out of the race, someone smarter than me said in many ways. and this i guess is my paraphrase in many ways, the question about the final days of this election is going to be what is the question you heard? trump's attempt, almost in passing two i've pointed toward the question that most republicans want voters to be asking, are you better off than you were four years ago? because most people will say no. i mean, there's a lot of frustration with the biden economies that a lot of accomplishments, but they've been overshadowed by inflation. and that in particular is opening the door for trump with a lot of working, working families plays. they're living paycheck to paycheck, including those in the minority community. but that isn't necessarily the question will be asking in the final days. the other question is, is it too much of a risk to restore the power this donald trump, who is talking so overtly in
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xenophobic or racist and authoritarian language. and that rally tonight was a kind of a potentially a crystallizing moment for the small number of voters that we are talking about that are still in play, particularly in michigan, pennsylvania, and wisconsin, maybe who are being reminded constantly that reelecting trump entailed tell us more than potentially lower prices for groceries and gas. there's a lot more that goes with it and tonight it was a kind of peel the mask back moment to remind everyone really, i've exactly all that is involved there. >> find the economy argument, interests amine, you had, you had half of the living american nobel prize when it was for economic saying trump's policies, just this last week, saying trump's policies would tank the economy. am i wanted to ask you this though about the polling because despite trump, it's neck and neck. young people in particular don't pick up the phone for pollsters that there might be people who lie and say they're
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not voting for trump them, do or, or perhaps there are some that might say they are voting for trump and don't. how reliable do you think these poll numbers are could, could there be a surprise where i think there are two ways to think about this. >> i mean, first, pollsters have done triple back flips in terms of honing and rethinking their methodology to try to the way the problems that we saw in 2020 and 2016 elections when polls significantly understated the number of particularly non-college whites who would come out and vote for trump but i feel like in some way we are almost beyond this question because it polls are telling you that they see or one or two point race and a state that they're not really polls are not capable of dividing down with the level of precision that would tell you who would win that someone, someone said to me earlier in this cycle, when you're dealing with a race that's within the margin of error in terms of polling,
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it's really within the margin of effort of the two sides. and we're talking about michigan, pennsylvania, and wisconsin, maybe georgia, as i said, the states that are most likely to decide this race all the polling can tell us, i think is that they are within reach for both candidates. and the question is, both the execution at the end, but also, as i said what is the question that voters are walking into the ballot box asking, are they asking are you better off than you were four years ago or are they looking at everything that we've seen from trump in this campaign and questioning whether they want to take the chance of giving him power. again, even if they might lean toward his policies on it she was like the economy and i do think that is the critical question in the final days. >> yeah, yeah, fascinating. ron, always good to see you. thanks for that. ron brownstein there the un says the israeli military operation in northern gaza is making life, quote, untenable for palestinians.
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in the subway out round of gaza ceasefire and hostage release talks that began in doha. this marks the first high-level talks in more than two months. top negotiators from the u.s. israel and contact i will be working to reach a deal egypt, which is long played a key role as a mediator in these talks, is proposing an initial two days ceasefire but for now, there is no end in sight to the war in gaza for palestinians on sunday, israel's military claimed at targeted hamas in an airstrike on a school near gaza city. gaza civil defense says several people were killed in a place where hundreds of displaced civilians are sheltering meanwhile, iran says it does not seek war with israel, but his vowing, quote, an appropriate response to israel's weekend attacks on the country israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu says his country severely damaged tehran's defense capabilities these up to far
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behind the attack and iran was precise and the powerful and achieved all of its objectives israeli military operations have also targeted his balah in lebanon, iran's most important proxy in the region, but israel's defense minister says neither hezbollah nor hamas effective proxies for iran anymore schnell, you've gotten him in these two organizations, hamas and hezbollah, that were prepared for years as a long arm against the state of israel are no longer and effective tool as a proxy of iran in the arena that comment as israeli strikes in lebanon continue their health ministry there says at least eight people were killed on sunday in an attack in the south gilbert. >> a professor of emergency medicine and a senior consultant for the clinic of emergency medicine at the university hospital of north
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norway. doctor, it's good to see you have worked extensively in gaza over the years. you've been working in the region since 1982, i think and you've been in contact with colleagues there. what have you heard about the israeli attacks on the kamala adwan hospital in the north and the impact of those attacks well, all the three hospitals in northern gaza, kamal, adwan and al-awda hospital. and the indonesian hospital have been severely sieged and attacked by israeli occupation forces. and the attack and entry of military forces in to the kamala adwan hospital has been very dramatic and we have all i guess heard about the medical director dr. hussam, who is defending his patients and who was his own son who was shocked at the gate of the hospital currently, the situation in come on but one is desperate.
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they have at least 145 trauma patients in the hospital they have lost the solar panel electricity, the oxygen machine concentration machine has been shot to pieces by israeli forces and they have only two doctors left used to be 57, and they have only seven nurses used to be 70 nurses so the situation is beyond dramatic. it's beyond desperate often we hear the broad strokes of what's going on. >> the casualty totals of the mass destruction. we were just looking at some of that and so on. but you do know oh, people where you work shoulder to shoulder alongside them you just mentioned the director of the hospital dr. hussam abu safiya. i want to play something that was recorded with him in the last day or so. let's listen hello hello, world. >> welcome
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personally or what what's it like hearing that? what he and seeing what's going on, particularly in the north where palestinians are being displaced in the tens of thousands i'll be honest with you, it is unbearable and i have to contain myself not to start weeping. >> but there are two sides to this recording one is, of course the personal loss and the immense grief that he is ceiling not only for his son, but for his hospital and for his patients and staff the other side is the bravery of the palestinian health care workers who are standing tall under this immense israeli attacks, which have been going
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on now for a year, for long, much longer than that, because this israeli army the occupation army has a modus operandi to attack health care. i just read through the last expert report to the united nations general assembly on the attacks on health care. and they sum up that israeli occupation forces from seventh of october until the first august this year have perpetrated more than one 1,000 attacks on healthcare in gaza and the west bank. and they have killed more than 800 health care workers. so unfortunately, history is not a single story. it is one of many stories. in fact the attacks on health care or so common that the report states that quote the israelis have plans and procedures to attack health care uncle and this of course, is a word crime. health care and patients and staff should be protected by international law and they should be a part of the civilian society where
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you could feel safe in gaza, they are targets and that is absent so look, they war crime as i said, you've been there many times. >> i've been there many times, myself as well. there are the images now and video of palestinians being forced on mass from the north. do you fear as many do, that this is a deliberate operation underway to clear the northern sector of all all palestinians, kremlin permanently in the south. what do you fear is going on no, absolutely. >> you're absolutely right. and i mean, you don't have to be neither a military expert nor geographer to understand that the ambition of this israeli occupation forces ethnically cleansing of north gaza, and reoccupying north gaza this is part of the occupation project of the state of israel. i mean, it's all about land grab. it's all about expanding the occupation of palestine. i'm a doctor.
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>> i'm not used to treat symptoms if you come to me with pain have to find the reason for the pain and not just give you some painkiller and they will root cause of the mystery we see in the medical sector. the root cause of all the ill-health we see in gaza and in the west bank. it's the illegal occupation of palestine and that has to be dealt with. we cannot just patch up with humanitarian help and more field hospital those and some bandages. we have to solve the root cause and that will not be solved by itself. it has to take more international power, more international actions to safeguard the security and the right to health of the palestinian people beat in the west bank or in gaza. this cannot go on don't i appreciate you, dr. mads gilbert and the work you've done in gaza, and i know you're in touch with people there who you know, very well at dr. gupta. thank you so much.
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>> thank you well, donald trump and kamala harris crisscrossing battleground states in the final stretch of the u.s. >> election will have the latest from the campaign trail coming up sandwiched between brands can i weigh in on this debate with department of agriculture generally defined sandwiches as meat between bread or a ban. what about subs? >> you mean these days $20 won't get to fall, but at red lobster, a big shrimp in baby gets stripped your away. >> choose three flavors for $20, like crispy dragons, trip good a big shrimp in today, only at red lobster subway is making foot-long snack in history first effort foot-long cookie churros and pretzels. >> now, all knew $3 footlong dippers is there a hall of fame for snacks? >> fine. you're perfect foot
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taylor.com only one in five people with disabilities including those with autism, are employed why outdated stigmas and beliefs. >> so let us make it easy. this it's a job for someone with autism so is this that job also perfect introducing win by autism speaks. we helped businesses lead the way and inclusive hiring yes, these are all jobs for someone with autism to learn more, go to autism speaks.org slash when cnn newsroom with me, michael holmes were only eight days away from the us election, of course. and kamala harris and donald trump remains statistically dead. even polls showing no clear leader. and they haven't a for some time now, the former us president, kicking off his final week of campaigning at madison square garden in new york on sunday, where he repeated his dark rhetoric on immigration. and
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attacked his political rivals. >> now, the fate of our nation is in your hands next tuesday, you have to stand up and you have to tell kamala harris that you've done a terrible job that truckee joe biden has done a terrible job. you've destroyed our country, were not going to take it anymore kamala, you're fired, get out. get out kamala harris planning to give her closing argument on the national mall in washington on tuesday. >> it's being held at the same place where trump spoke on january 6 before his supporters stormed the u.s. capitol where the rican superstar, bad bunny is signaling his support for harris after a speaker at trump's rally made those offensive comments about the u.s. territory. the singer's shared a clip of the vice president's newly announced
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economic plan for puerto rico he to his more than 45 million instagram followers. this comes as both the harris and trump campaigns vibe where the, for the puerto rican vote several other puerto rican celebrate celebrities including jennifer lopez and ricky martin, voice support for harris after a comedian cold weather, he go a quote floating island of garbage during trump's madison square garden event in new york more than 40 million people have already cast their ballots with early voting underway. now, in most states voting centers opened on saturday and 29 counties across california, where the race for the u.s. house and senate is also heating up cnn's julia vargas reports saying that they are keenly aware of the importance of their votes. this time around, not something you hear often in california that usually goes
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blue, but here in the 45th congressional district, this is one of the most watched races. >> one of the tightest races that could end up deciding think, if democrats or republicans end up taking control of the house of representatives. the incumbent michelle steel. she's running for a third term, which is being challenged by democrat derek tran. bill clinton was here on saturday campaigning for trend in this district that was redistricted in 2020, making now about 40% of the population asian asian-american, about 30% of the population here hispanic. now, we spoke to one of those voters who told us a little bit of why they came to vote early in the issues they care the most about. why vote early versus coming here on election day. >> well, that was if anything happens on election day, like i have an accident or something and then i know my bad my ballots going to be taken care of. i don't have to worry about it, but now i i'm retired. it's not as big a deal. but when you're working, it's a
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little bit bigger of a deal. i'm particularly worried about the senate and the house to make sure that they get on the side. i want i'm a democrat then i'm also well, the prep prepositions, the propositions democracies, probably the biggest one and that kind of tells what i'm worried about. >> well for one, has 21 million registered voters, 1.8 million of those voters here in orange county at this polling station in cyprus, there was about 300 people coming in to vote on the first day of early we voting. julia vargas jones, cnn, cyprus, california well, japan is being plunged into political uncertainty after the ruling coalition lost its majority for the first time in 15 years. >> new prime minister shigeru ishiba faces some tough decisions. he'll have to team up with others paula, parties or risk rulings through minority government. cnn's marc
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stewart is following the story for us from beijing and marc this, this was a, this was a big punch for a troubled coalition. so what happens next? >> well, there's been a lot of questions michael about the fate of the prime minister. and as we come on the air, we had just heard some remarks from prime minister ishiba. and the big headline been is that he will not step down and he said he will fulfill his commitment. let me read you some of his remarks from this news conference. he just held. he said that the party has been held under harsh judgment from voters. this vote was harsh he called the loss painful and said that the party needs to basically be reborn and that is very important because right now, japan has very big issues that it needs ticket front. and the question is, does the party in this current landscape, have the power and the poll to get things done. that is what the
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big challenge is going to be. so there's a lot of work taking place behind the scenes, most likely to try to strengthen the existing coalition from some parties outside. so that's going to be the behind the scenes maneuvering that was taking place. now, as far as the issues that need to be that need to be confronted, certainly the economy right now, the japanese way and yet it has become week once again, inflation is high. so there is this economic unease facing the country. and then the other issue that has really hit this party hard was a political scandal, allegations of kickbacks, allegations of lawmakers not necessarily disclosing the true state of their finances. so that is why this is going to be so difficult for this government moving forward. so the real question michael, is will the prime minister be able to get the support he needs? or is
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this a sign? that the government is going to go in a different direction? i should point out, it's not unusual for prime minister's to change to change position on a frequent basis. we had prime minister abe there for a long time. we had prime minister kashida there. but there's often this phrase of musical chairs or a realignment in japan when it comes to the prime minister's office, that spot, we do see things change frequently. so if that does happen again, they wouldn't necessarily be out of the norm. but a lot of people are watching. a lot of nations are watching, including the united states which has certainly japan and depends on the united states for military support. but the united states also very actively helping japan strained relationships with north korea in many ways as a front because of the concerns being faced from here in china, michael all right. >> appreciate the reporting. marc stewart there. thanks well, for centuries, women have been banned from holding leadership roles in the
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leadership roles reform calling on the pope to take action. it's time. now to open or days ministry's to women finding a greater role for women in the catholic church has become an urgent issue the all-male clergy continue to dominate decision-making roles in the church even more so in the vatican, women are barred for
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ordination as priests. and like previous popes francis has upheld that ruling this pope has opened a door to reform appointing women to senior positions in the vatican, recognizing the role women are already playing in the church, seeking to give them greater visibility. and for the first time giving women the right to vote at the vatican sinatra assembly, which concluded on sunday definitely one of those voter participants is a 23-year-old studying geology and physics in philadelphia. >> the youngest woman to take part in such an event. >> there is definitely an urgent needs to not only realize and accept that women have an equal but dismal dignity to man in the catholic sure. but also to take action and arson is discussing issues and how to better make women visible, give them leadership roles give them the same platform of action as men in the catholic church. >> nikki said nevertheless, francis has faced criticism for
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expressing conservative views on women's roles the pope also knocking back a proposal for women to become deacons and aldane's church position but the vatican assembly insisting this topic must continue to be look tat and for women to be given leadership roles or dare to see a public. >> francis accepting their proposals recognizing the need for more reform. >> if we don't take a strong stand we are. it's contradicting our own message inside our own institution. we also have to do more steps in the face of a male dominated vatican culture. centuries of inequality change won't come overnight the pope has opened a window for women. >> yeah, there's no question under his pontificate i've seen women occupied really important senior roles. here in rome, in the vatican, but also increasingly across the judgment. and we've got women voting in a sinner divisions for the first time. >> what may seem like small steps to those on the outside
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are in fact leaps for many within the church christopher lamb, cnn, rome well, it was a case that captivated the world. >> the menendez brothers was sentenced to life in prison without parole for the murders of their parents but now, it could be released from prison. will have the latest after the break they may have allergic apa
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designers that get your heart racing had inside a prices new, everyday, hurry. they'll be gone in a flash designer sales at up to 70% or so of gilt.com today mexico city's formula one grand prix ended with a surprise victory. ferrari's carlos sainz won on sunday it with for our, his first win in mexico since 1990. and the fourth time science is one there three-time world champ verstappen finished six because of 210 second penalties now after more than three decades in prison, the menendez brothers could be free by thanksgiving. the brothers admitted to and were convicted of killing their parents but they claim they acted in self-defense after a lifetime of abuse at the hands of their father, jose menendez. and now there is new evidence that could lend credence to the brothers claims. our elizabeth wagmeister reports that's the man here
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rosale of former member of the boy band menudo alleging that he too was raped in the mid-80s by jose menendez then a top executive for rca records, infamously shot dead by his sons you. >> do this account first revealed last year in a peacock documentary, is part of the evidence the menendez brothers included in their petition to have their case re-examined. the 1990s ship caught up with the truth. >> journalist robert rand is a co-executive producer of menendez plus menudo, boys betrayed. he uncovered rosa ayoze, chilling account. >> no other young man has ever come forward and said that he was raped by jose menendez. we believe that there might be
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other victims out there, and we are hoping that they'll contact us. >> his documentary is one of several hollywood projects about the menendez case release since 2023. along with both a netflix documentary and a splashy drama from meg the producer, ryan murphy, earlier this week, los angeles county district attorney, george gascon up for reelection, told cnn the publicity and renewed interest caused him to expedite his decision on the menendez case, given the public attention to this case, i've decided to try to come up with an assertion earlier. >> it is satisfying to know that for example, our documentary and it was precited as evidenced in the boy's habeas petition, esther esterase directed the peacock dock in, tells cnn royal zao will testify if the court demands he's an incredibly credible witness. i interviewed him for hours. he's very it's a not everyone thinks the menendez brothers who admit to the murders should go free. but
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celebrities like rosie o'donnell and kim kardashian have led hollywood's push for a renewed understanding of sexual abuse survivors today the docks like surviving r. kelly and the jinx, had a real impact on the courts now, another hollywood production aims to tip the scales of justice. >> some of the melendez spores were saying, well, where was so 30 years ago? when the brothers foreign file. but you have to understand that some people are showing ashamed of being abuse survivors. they take that secret to their graves that was elizabeth wagmeister reporting for us. well, there was a special guest in the crowd for adele saturday night concert in las vegas. have a look at this emotional hug between adele and celine dion. it brought the two powerhouse singers to tears and brought the crowd to its feet.
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her las vegas residency. she's performing in the caesars palace venue that was specially built more than two decades ago to host celine dion jones own residency a couple of legends, their thanks for watching cnn newsroom spending part of your day with me. i'm michael holmes, stick around. my friend and colleague paula newton picks up with more news after the break political analysis? >> you have questions, how biden said the right both stayed awake. why did trump pulled out of 60 minutes? i love pulling out losing that word by god news for you are cute until they're not
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not clean until it's stanley steamer clean. >> i'm a lifelong republican. i voted for trump twice, but i can't do it again. trump wants a national sales tax on imported goods. it will make everything more expensive for regular people all while giving tax breaks to billionaires. >> we're gonna give you tax. >> kamala harris is it's for regular people. she wants to tax cut for 100 million americans. so we keep more of our hard-earned money. i'm a proud republican, but this year i'm voting for common harris ff pac is responsible for the content of this add built for places you probably never be where you are. >> most
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mark farrell endorsing prop d, to bring the changes we need for the city we love. san francisco's leadership is failing us. that's why mark farrell is endorsing prop d. because we need to tackle our drug and homelessness crisis just like mark did as our interim mayor. mark farrell endorsing prop d, to bring the changes we need for the city we love. dash.com and see how much you can save
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