tv CNN News Central CNN October 29, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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they sort of just take care of it at home themselves. the top foods incidentally, for potential foodborne illnesses, turkey fruits, chicken and pork. those are going to be the most likely culprits and there are several types of pathogens that can potentially be expelled. you could be exposed to and including salmonella that's more common in the summer months norovirus, that's the thing that people associate with cruise ships. and when you look at these, these, these pathogens overall, you got to keep in mind that just a small amount just a very small amount could actually make people sick. and that's why there's so much focus on this. >> you did give us some good advice the beginning, which is to make sure to cook meat at a high enough temperature that could help kill something like e coli. dr. sanjay gupta, it is always a pleasure and don't forget to scan the qr code on your screen and send us your questions on the risks of illnesses from the food you eat and how you can stay safe. dr.
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gupta will be back later this week to answer all your questions john a and new hour o cnn, new central starts right now fascism mixed with messages of joy in optimism combined with an economic message for the future new details on the speech kamala harris hopes will secure her spot in the white house we are standing by for donald trump to deliver a news conference. >> will he answer questions about the racist jokes about puerto rico? at his rally? will he apologize. new details on nerves over this inside trump world. at two new lawsuits filed against sean combs, one of them accusing him of sexually assaulting a ten-year-old boy i'm john berman with kate baldwin and sarah sidner. this is cnn new central
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and tonight, kamala harris makes her closing argument speech to voters from the very place donald trump on january 6, 2021, told his supporters to fight like hell and march. >> this justin, we just learned 40,000 people are now expected to be at her speech. and this morning, we are also standing by to hear from trump at a press conference at mar-a-lago. these have a history of going wild. places will see what happens this time and it will happen though before he heads to pennsylvania as he this morning still faces the fallout over his madison square garden rally. let's start with kevin liptak, who is at the ellipses this morning. what are you hearing? the campaign from the harris side is going to focus on today >> the words that harris advisers used to describe this speech are hopeful, optimistic, those aren't necessarily the themes that we might have expected when we first heard
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that harris would be delivering this closing argument speech from the ellipse, from the place that donald trump rallied his supporters on january 6, before they marched to storm the capitol but certainly the harris team but once this speech to be bigger than that, this is not necessarily going to be a treaties on democracy. a dissertation about the state of the republic. they want it to be for more optimistic vision, and they've chosen this spot because you can see the white house in the background. this place where she'll be speaking. it's only about 500 yards from the oval office and they very much want harris to allow viewers an undecided voters to visualize her as president, to paint a picture of the type of precedent that she would be. so you'll hear her talking about her vision for the economy, for reproductive rights. certainly she will try and draw a contrast past with donald trump to emphasize the chaos that he brought to the white house when he was president. but they
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don't necessarily want this to be centered on the theme of democracy we'll be an aspect, but it won't be the thrust of the entire speech and the real hope was that this can go after what the harris team calls conflicted voters voted there's who aren't necessarily behind donald trump, who may be concerned about some of the rhetoric they've been hearing from him over the last several weeks but aren't necessarily so hold on. kamala harris, who want to hear more about what she would do in office, want to know more about her as a person and this will be their opportunity to do just that. they're likening it to closing argument in a trial. of course, harris was herself for prosecutor. they say she's been laying out the evidence to the jury in this case to the voters, and this is her opportunity to bring it all together in a final tent pole moment for the campaign. now this speeches tonight, she is spending the majority of the day doing interviews, including television interview who's in battleground states. she did just speak on the radio show,
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the breakfast club, and sort of laid out her vision for the final week of the campaign. listen to what she said we are a week out and i am just i'm in i'm in the zone. right. we got to cover a lot of ground. there's still a lot of people to talk with and so i am traveling all over the country, in particular, the swing-state it's to talk with folks and organize them and reminds us of the power of their vote saying she's going to grind out this final week of the campaign. >> of course, it's hard to imagine any single one speech will convince all if the undecided voters to go for harris, but certainly they do hope that this will be a moment to lay the stakes of this campaign. sara right? >> kevin liptak. thank you so much for that. >> so very soon donald trump will be holding a press conference at mar-a-lago, and that is before heading to battleground, pennsylvania at once again the final campaign stretch comes as his campaign is also trying to clean up the mess created from his madison
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square garden rally and the racist jokes told by his warm-up acts. what does this mean for trump's closing argument here at least in part, is part of it. his closing argument, what they're trying for turning his anger back on kamala harris but she's a fascist. okay. she's a fascist she and her group of very bad people are truly a threat cnn's alayna treene live from mar-a-lago. >> ahead of this press conference today alayna, what do you expecting from trump here? >> oh, okay. that's the big i think the big question is whether or not he's going to address some of those sexist and racist remarks that were on sunday specifically, that comment from the comedian tony hinchcliffe, who called puerto rico a floating pile of garbage when i talk to donald trump's senior campaign advisors, they told me that part of the reason that this game together and i'll note this actually came together within 24 hours. this
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was not on his schedule, it was kind of a scramble for them to put but on they said that this was really trump wanting to mark the one week out from election day. and then i also was told and this was they said, really the reason, which is that he wanted to draw a contrast with harris with the her speech on the ellipse tonight. now, again, i think there's a big question and there's probably, you know, a lot of people are anticipating that he is going to address some of what happened at madison square garden on sunday, but i do want to also talk about you mentioned the battlegrounds of pennsylvania later today. first that pennsylvania is home to a massive population of puerto rico's allentown, specifically where he's going to be having that rally this evening is a lot of puerto rican has a large puerto rican population there as well. so keep that in mind because this is all going in a play a theme today. now i do also wonder, listen to some of what he said yesterday, because we've been hearing donald
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trump, who did not push back yesterday at in his events in georgia and what had happened at madison square garden, but he did push back on what he said was dangerous rhetoric from kamala harris and democrats and tried to defend himself arguing that he he is the opposite of a nazi. a listen the newest line from kamala and her campaign is that everyone who isn't voting for her is a nazi i had a great father tough guy. >> he is always saying never use the word nazi, never use that word at it. say never used don't use that word. and yet they use that word freely, both words they used he's hitler and then they say he's a nazi i'm the opposite of that that is really important as well is that that those comments that he made yesterday, but also on on sunday at madison square garden, this is all supposed to
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be a part of his closing argument to voters. this is really what the trump campaign is trying to, you know, leave this final last ding impression on voters, with just days to go. but right now, dealing with that rhetoric from sunday is not exactly what they've been wanting to do. john now alayna treene opposite of a nazi is not generally the closing argument that you plan for in the last eight days of a campaign, alayna treene, thanks to you with us now cnn, political commentator, spectrum news political anchor and host of the big deal with errol louis, the aforementioned errol louis. >> here also cnn senior political commentator ana navarro, and senior political analyst and senior editor for the atlantic ron brownstein, want to take this in succession if we can't, anna, let's just end where alayna was right there at this news conference, donald trump's about to give speculation about whether he'll address the racist jokes about puerto rico at this rally. what can he say? do you think would make a difference? >> nothing too little too late. listen, that comedian who said the most racist, horrible
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jokes, not only about puerto rico, but about latinos, about blacks i mean, who wasn't offended by the comedian and the other speakers that spoke before trump that comedian spoke 4.5 hours before donald trump took the stage at madison square garden, he had four-and-a-half hours to go out there, take that podium in front of those people and everybody watching online and say, you know what? those jokes went too far. they don't reflect how i feel. i love puerto rico, but you know what? he didn't do that it's been over 24 hours now. and in those four hours between the comedian and donald trump, rick scott in florida came out, who's running where there's 1 million puerto ricans that live there as elassar, the congresswoman from miami came out. so believe me, there were a bunch of people calling the trump campaign telling them this was a 911, this is a five alarm fire right now. it has served to remind the latino community and i think america at at-large
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about who donald trump is because the reason that comedian went out there and called puerto rico a floating island of garbage is because donald trump has treated puerto rico like garbage. the way that he threw paper towels at people in need after maria, the way that he responded to maria in puerto rico in comparison to how he responded to red states, they had hurricanes. the way that it was reported that he talked about trading puerto rico or selling puerto rico trading for greenland. a brought it all back errol is is it purely political matter he's called this news conference for 10:00, one assumes in a normal campaign and i know that maybe a stretch here, there would be some plan to address this. >> yes maybe the strategically you want to be involved in every news cycle, right? >> because only seven days left. so you don't want the day to go by without being somewhere on the screen. so that's the first reason that
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he's doing this, but we also know from years of experience, almost a decade now of experience with donald trump is that the way he puts out a fire five alarm fire is to start another fire. so i wouldn't be at all surprised if he used this opportunity this morning to say something else that's outrageous and hope that we'll talk about that and maybe move on from what happened over the weekend. >> just one final point hearing and alayna played at four the donald trump saying, i'm the opposite of a nazi when you hear that out loud, there i can't it's not it's not a message you plan to make the last week. >> it's not a great closing message the political scientist in me is he says, well, yes, technically i guess you and authoritarian, if you want to be a dictator on day one and so forth and so on. so, yes, it is sloppy to say nazi because that means they particular thing, but he's sort of in that zone. and the fact that people see him as an authoritarian and an enemy of democracy is also problematic. your final week, ron, i want to transition to the harris speech today. >> unless you wanted to weigh in on the donald trump matter,
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which you could do. john, go ahead. >> yeah. >> go ahead. click one thing about that real quick. >> the focus on the language and the offensive language from the rally, from multiple speakers about multiple targets at the same time, the rally was happening thanks, tom homan, one of his top immigration advisers, was on 60 minutes saying that as part of the mass deportation, they intend also to deport a us citizen children with undocumented parents. that's how they are going to avoid family separation by also deporting the kids. there are 4 million hispanic us citizen children of with at least one undocumented parent and about 1 million other nationalities. so like, wow, we're focused on the offensive rhetoric the reality is if there are really sharp edge policies that go behind, that redick similarly to when john kelly so much focus was on him saying that trump admired hitler's generals or said positive things about hitler. i thought the most important thing john kelly said was that
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as president trump repeatedly sought to use the u.s. military free against us citizens on him in american cities and had to be stopped. so that there's a lot of focus on trump's saying offensive things and people may be shrugging that off. but there is an agenda that goes along with that language that is not just, you know showboating or kind of offensive remarks. it is actual tangible policies that affect the same communities that are, that are being targeted with his language, iran you quickly on the harris speech today and he lives, you write eloquently on this tension that has come up in the democratic party between does harris focus? on some of the things you're describing, what some people call the authoritarian nature of donald trump's threat to democracy? or does she focus on her policy, you know, housing credits? you talk about this tension. how does he navigate that today? >> well, look, there's a big debate in the democratic party.
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i mean, the arguments about democracy and rights, particularly abortion, resonate most powerfully with white-collar, upper middle-class college plus voters. and there's a school in the democratic party there says she has to focus primarily on telling economically squeezed working class voters, black, latino, and maybe working class white women. what she will do for them economically, it feels as though she has come up with a pretty elegant bridge between those two points of view, which i think is going to be the centerpiece of the speech again tonight, which is to say, if donald trump gets back in the white house he will, he will arrive there with an enemies list. if i get in the white house, i will arrive there with a to-do list for you. and one phrase that whoever came up with that phrase probably deserves a raise kind of encapsulating both arguments to make the case that trump is so focused on retribution and threatening the constitutional order that he simply has no time or energy to solve your problems, and that will be my focus. i think that is a pretty good way of trying to bridge what is a very real divide in
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the democratic party about what are closing message should be. >> and it does that do it, does that do enough for her with one week to go? >> okay. i think the symbolism of this speech happening where donald trump spoke before january 6, it just draws such a stark contrast for me. this is about making it a binary choice. the binary choice between a racist and a woman who wants to represent all americans. it's a binary choice between a convicted felon and a woman who prosecutes crimes chemicals it's a binary choice between a man who feels he is above the law and above democracy. and a woman who wants to defend democracy in the room, in the place where it happened. so i think i think the symbol is of it is great. i want her to talk about policies because people say, oh, you know, she's not offering plans. where have they been? just google it go on her website. eight hours before the
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madison square garden rally, where puerto ricans and latinos and everybody else was being offended she had released policy to help the people of puerto rico very thoughtful, comprehensive policy url, little curveball here just before we walked out here, joe rogan posted on x that the harris campaign has not passed on having the vice president sit down with joe rogan. >> what he says is, right now the issue is he wants it to be in austin where his studios or he wants it to be a three-hour, the harris campaign wanted it to be somewhere else, maybe a little shorter. how much of a risk would it be for her to do that podcast in the waning days of the candidates. >> i don't think it's a risk at all. i mean, i it might be a waste of time, but i don't think it's a risk. i mean, look she needs to talk to and she's been specifically trying to talk to younger men and younger men of lesser education, not college educated she doesn't connect with them naturally please. she hasn't had a pitch that has really hit home with them so far. he's issued some policy statements,
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but they're not really well thought out and a lot of ways. and so she needs some authenticity and if she thinks it will help her in detroit, philadelphia, pittsburgh or milwaukee than it's worth their time if she's not sure that that's going to happen, that it's a complete waste of time. it doesn't young male voters out of texas, that's not a state that she's going after early hours an awfully long time though i mean, this is something that donald trumcan do because he rambles for three hours, but really other than my dog, is there anybody i want to spend three hours with? i'm not sure. >> i will say this this show was three hours every monday through friday, and i love spending it here with kate bolduan and sarah seidner, ended of auto ron breath, cfra, louis thank you all very much yes. oh, my god, we have a dog here. chacha and his dog is here as well. >> this morning, a brand new fact-check from cnn's daniel dale. he will say yes, that is in fact, a cute dog. and also
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campaign had made a habit of deceptively using quotations in his television ads are taking words out of context, cutting out words from quotes to change their meaning and then it released this ad a few days after marital, which i think is the most egregious example yet. so let me give you four examples of how this new ad deceptively uses so-called quotations. first of all, the ad claims that it has, quote supposedly from the new york times, it says, harris is seeking to significantly raise taxes. okay. so it sounds like the new york times reported she wants a broad tax increase. well, i went to the actual article. what does it say? it says harris is seeking to significantly raise taxes on the wealthiest americans and large corporations. the ad excluded those he words. a second example, the ad appears to quote cbs news, saying the words harris vows to keep biden's border. and this this claim in the ad is accompanied by a claim that biden had an open border. so it suggests that cbs reported harris wants to keep a liberal border
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policy. well, go to the actual cbs news article. it says, harris vows to keep biden's border crackdown. so the it had eliminated the word crack down, goes onto quota are saying the united states is a sovereign nation the cbs article begins during a visit to the us-mexico border, vice president kamala harris vowed to keep president biden's asylum crackdown in place if elected, solidifying democrats embrace of more stringent immigration rules. so basically the opposite of what the ad suggested. a third example of the ad that appears to quote nbc news, saying the words welfare for illegals. now you notice there that the date of this suppose a citation is 2018. that's before the biden/harris administration even began more than a couple of years before. in fact, i went to that real nbc news article it's not even about biden-harris. it does not even mention either of them and does not claim that they wanted to or were giving wealth welfare to illegal immigrants. it's on a totally different topic. it's on strict occupational licensing rules that were preventing daca recipients the
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so-called dreamers, from working in certain professions it said, regardless of one's position on welfare for illegal immigrants, there's that phrase, a licence is clearly different from food stamps and other government safety nets. so again, totally out of context, and i'll give you one final example. the ad includes the words in very large tax with some explosion in the background. it says global war and it tributes this to the media outlet axios so again, i went to the actual axios article. it does not say that there is global war under biden and harris is there isn't, although there is some war, the article is actually about a commission studying us readiness for future possible war. the headline is us not ready for global war. commission warrants. it was about again, a by partisan groups findings about the u.s preparedness for hypothetical future conflict, not about the present situation. so this all seems obvious, like when you put them side-by-side, it seems viously egregiously. egregious distortions, but we know that most people, most viewers of these ads are just not going to see the truth. they're just going to see
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those misleadingly snipped versions people don't have the time to have to go clicking through the articles. >> thank god you do. but calling it misleading an egregious is almost an understatement what we're seeing here in these final days, daniel, thank you for laying out the facts sara. >> alright. kamala harris, winding down her final pitch to voters. >> but let me move focused on her plans or about her opponent and disturbing details about two new civil lawsuits filed against sean "diddy" combs. >> the allegations he's facing now from a former contestant on the mtv show, making the band you want to answer a astute political analysis. you have questions out. biden said the right, all stay awake why did front pulled out of i love pulling out those network of i got news for you saturday at nine on cnn. >> when you're looking for answers, it's good to have help because the right information at the right time
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way only cnn can bring it to you election night in america, special coverage begins tuesday, november 5, and cnn new this morning, kamala harris saying just moments ago in a brand new radio interview with the breakfast club she talked about some polls showing she's struggling with support among black men. >> she says those polls are flat-out wrong. take a listen the brothers aren't saying that. i mean, i was just at the barbershop in philly talking with very incredible and distinguished men who are leaders in their community and small business and education and these men, these black men, were talking about not only their support for me, but most importantly their support for my perspective. but the black men in particular, who are at the rallies have recently been saying to me, don't you listen to that? and they got to stop with all that noise? we support you with me now is democratic senator from california,
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lafonza butler. >> thank you so much for getting up early and coming on with us. you are harris's campaign co-chair there was an uptick in support for donald trump among black men in 2020, about six percentage points so do you think that the polling is incorrect and what she's hearing from black men at her rallies is right having me and congratulations to you on ringing the bill look as it relates to black men. >> and this, in this election, one of the first things i think is important and i think the vice president spoke to it in her remarks on the breakfast club as we i congratulate them for being the most loyal high performing demographic of electorate focusing on voting for democrats second only to two black men and i think that this election is going to be no different ai based on, young black men. and middle-age black men. that i've talked to as
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i've traveled battleground states across this country on behalf of this campaign they too are saying to me that they are supporting the vice president, that they stand in favor of the policies that she is promoting and that they reject the division that is being promoted from the other side. so i you know, polls are snapshot in time i'm will all know in the next seven days how they will how they will turn out. and i think they're going to be showing up for vice president harris. >> alright. >> i want to talk to you about this because before you came to congress, you were los angeles space leader of the home care workers union and you back then gave kamala harris some advice before she became came vice president, that she actually took to walk a day in the shoes of home care workers to understand the challenges. >> so i want to get your take on this this political pac in a memo warned the harris campaign against attacking donald trump for being a fascist, saying it turns off voters, but this morning the new york times is
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reporting the harris campaign quietly thinks it's actually working the attacks and it's particularly working with moderate republicans what are you advising on this issue? >> yes sara, i think this is an election that is just about choices and the vice president is both. i think attempting to lay out a vision for the american people i love what her governing style is going to be like. what are the policies that she's going to be bringing forward and to contrast those those policies and that to-do lists, i'm with the words, frankly, and actions of donald trump. and so i don't think it's necessarily in this moment and either or it is a both and the, this is an election where people want to know who they're voting for and what are the threats that are on the other side? and i think we're trying to make that contrast really, really clear. and the think the vice president is doing a good job at that i want to ask you about
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what we saw at madison square garden is a trump campaign trying to distance itself from the racist jokes about puerto ricans being an island of trash but they have said nothing about the racist joke by the same community in talking about black folks and watermelons. >> what should harris do with this love a good joke and you just take the words of the archbishop of san juan and you know, and as he has demanded an apology personally, from former president trump, look, i think that that the rally, if you want to call it that at madison square garden was a despicable display of hate and division. >> nothing new from the president trump and those who have been supporting him. and for president harris, for vice president harris i think she's got just lit trump's words and
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the words of his allies stand on their own and talk about what her plan is to unite the country. when you look at the rallies all across the country that the vice president is having. these are coalitions and communities standing together, having a joyful time and knowing that the power of our country is when people from across different spectrums and lived experiences come together to do impossible things. and that's the work that we have in front of us. and i think that's the work that the vice president is going to be talking think about tonight. >> harris faced some real criticism for saying that first that she wouldn't change anything about joe biden's agenda to saying that she is a very different person and a different candidate how do you convince voters at the end of the day who she is and what she stands for >> look, i think president biden and the partnership that
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he and vice president harris have had has had an incredible the positive impact on moving our country forward from a time where we were all living through the pain of losing 1 million americans during the pandemic too point in our of our government where we're making real progress. the work and the presidency of vice president harris, if she were to be successful. next next tuesday is a true damage, is going to be who demonstration of who she is. and we've just got to continue to tell that story. the vice president said 13 weeks to introduce herself to the american people. i think she's done an incredible job, but she very much is a is a different person with a different lived experience from a middle-class family and she's gonna center what she he has learned from the american people all across this country. and i think that's, that has been appearing in how she has run an executed this campaign.
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the policies that she's put forth being everyday places where everyday voters are. and that's, i think a clear demonstration on how she is going to lead he didn't end the work that we have in front of us to these next 77 days senator laphonza butler, i will say to you good luck with your la dodgers. >> it could be a sweep i'm not taking sides, but i am on this one all right. okay? >> more than 8 million young voters will be eligible to make their pick for president for the first time this year. and both campaigns would really like their votes. but how are how is their messaging playing out to win those votes and i'm going to sort of man is now charged after allegedly shooting his neighbor. well, that neighbor was just doing yard work why the police chief now says, quote, we failed this victim 100%
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new season now streaming exclusively on paramount plus i'm elizabeth wagmeister in los angeles in this is cnn this morning, sean combs is facing two new lawsuits accusing him of sexual assault. one of the accusers says combs assaulted him when he was just 10-years-old. cnn's elizabeth wagmeister is here with the details on this, lay it out for us. elizabeth these are incredibly disturbing allegations, so i do want to warn our for viewers that this is very sensitive material that i am about to talk about. >> so two new lawsuits against sean combs, both coming from anonymous male users who claim that they were minors at the time. now, one of the accuser's claims that he was just a ten-year-old boy when he
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was allegedly assaulted and he believed he's drugged by combs in 2005, he says that he first met combs at an audition of sorts in a hotel room in new york. that is when he says that combs gave him soda and then he felt funny after he believes that that soda contains some sort of drugs. he says that combs talk to him i'm about how badly he wanted to be a star and said quote, you have to do some stuff. you don't want to do some times that is when this accuser says that he froze in terror as he was sexually assaulted again, this was allegedly a ten-year-old boy at the time. he says that he lost consciousness and not when he woke up that he would because in pain. now, the next accuser alleges that he was 17-years-old at the time and that he also met combs at an audition. he says that he was trying out for him is mtv show making the band, which was a very popular show. and over the course of the three-day
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audition, he says that he was sexually assaulted numerous times. times now, combs's attorneys deny these claims when i reached out, they did not respond to these specific allegations, but i want to read you part of what they told me, john, they said, quote as we've said before, mr. combs cannot respond to every new publicity stunt even in response to claims that are ridiculous or demonstrably false, mr. combs? legal team have full confidence in the facts and the integrity of the judicial process in court. the truth will prevail that mr. combs never sexually assaulted anyone or trafficked anyone man or woman, adult, or minor. so there you see, they are not just denying these two new lawsuits, but they are denying every allegation against him john, this is the 27th lawsuit now against combs. and of course, he is incarcerated as he awaits his criminal trial. >> all right. new information. it seems every day in this case are these cases elizabeth wagmeister. thank you very much so the presidential election
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could swing on the influence of influencers. >> but there is a mystery over the month let me behind some of these posts special coverage begins tuesday, november 5 at four on cnn one law firm climb inspector, has won some of the biggest verdicts in american history so if a defective product, motor vehicle accident more medical malpractice cost a catastrophic injury contact climb inspector the five things you need to know to start your day stream. cnn's five things with kate bolduan for the news you need bolduan for the news you need about this for an earnings call
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harris-walz campaign is cnn. >> one example, the democratic pac priorities usa and voter advocacy groups almost vote tante is recently announced a three, nearly $3 million campaign that involved paying influencers to help get out the vote. but here's the big challenge. there is no law that requires influencers to disclose if they have been paid for a political post. that's different from most branded content. most of the time, influencers are required to label if they've been paying paid to promote a brand or a product. but that's not the case when it comes to these political posts. and that's a challenge, right? because we know that so many young voters, especially are getting their news from tiktok, from social
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media right now, about 40% of young voters say they regularly rely on tiktok for news and the fact that influencers are not required to disclose these kinds of endorsements means that voters and users are on their own to try to assess out, is this influencers post just there genuine feelings they're just telling me who they're going to vote for or have they been paid to promote that point of view, sara something that they will have to sort out. it may not matter to some people as well. clare duffy. thank you so much. appreciate it. kate and journeys right now, is cal schroeder. >> is the chairman of the wisconsin young republicans it's and the chair of the colorado young democrats, chris davis. thanks so much for being here. >> chris, there's more than 8 million people who will be eligible to vote for the first time this year. >> if you look more broadly, just looking at the numbers, nearly 42 million people 18 to 27-years-old, which is, you know, gen z are going to be l are eligible to vote bouncing off claire's reporting, how big of a role do you think
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tiktok and social media are playing how gen z and young voters are making their decision on who to vote before well, initially i just want to acknowledge that that's something that's kind of hard to measure. >> we don't have much data on it. that is definitely a more recent trend in our political happenings however they are clearly having an impact given the amounting this engagement, the likes all that kind of stuff it really gets out there and i find that especially on tiktok, is a platform that really a lot of young people feel enables them to get the straight truth and nothing but the truth. a little bit more unfiltered as you would then perhaps maybe facebook or instagram. >> yeah, advantages and disadvantages, right if used well in khan as well. and then the downsides of what we've all we've covered, the downsides of that extensively. kyle kamala harris was in michigan yesterday and it bring it up because she's near the
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university of michigan's campus and during her remarks, she made a direct appeal to younger voters. i want to play some of what she said i love your generation i really do and one of the things about it is you are rightly him and patient for change. >> i love that about patient for change with you. >> but what are you hearing from other young republicans about what is landing? >> well, first i'll have to say, i wish kamala harris was impatient for change because she she was impatient for change. we'd have changed right now. we'd have a better economy. we have young voters that are graduating college with massive amounts of deaths that her and joe biden promised to alleviate for them. they did not change that. we have a border crisis that she's failed on. she did not change that. we have an economy that's failing
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and she hasn't changed that so i wish that kamala harris would change something right now. she can do that but i think that young voters already for change, and that's why in seven days that they're going to elect donald j. trump and jd vance, who is the youngest ticket right now on the ballot for young voters to vote for 56 months. >> but it is the youngest ticket. >> jd vance speaks directly to young voters in she can spout that at a rally by the university of michigan. but in wisconsin, here, we're hurting young voters are hurting. we can't buy houses, we can't buy groceries. we don't know what we're going to do when we start families. so i wish that she would be that impatient that that impatient that she's saying young voters are. we are we are going to vote for donald trump in seven days here change, but how it changes defined and how young voters view change differently as a big issue that you're hearing about chris, i have seen some
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reporting democrats spending about half $1 million in last last-minute push against third party candidates, jill stein and cornell west. >> this is large part is a push toward, targeting young, young voters. the background is dems blame in part our third parties for losses in 2020, 16. so now they're not looking past the third party candidates. this time is what you see in this, in this spending are you hearing a lot of support for third party candidates still do you think it could be a problem for harris third-party support to be honest. >> i think that a lot of young people are catching on to how our political system works in short, basically, we understand that the stakes are high when it comes to a presidential race. and a lot of us are going to be voting, not necessarily for the candidate that we feel most best represents our values, but creates an
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environment that will really empower young people to actually take the reins and come into leadership we can always talk about how a presidential candidate can come in and bring change. >> but really, as i think president or vice president harris, soon to be president harris would even acknowledge that change starts from the bottom up and so if we're going to be engaging with youth voters, we need to recognize that these third party entities, while maybe they seem attractive at first glance to some new people into the political arena. >> people quickly see that they just don't have the record to run on to be able to run country or anything like that. and that's why i'm really glad that all the work we've done as the colorado young democrats has positioned us to really be in a position later, post-election to bring that change chris davis calls for thanks for coming in thank you and thank you for joining us is
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cnn news central with john and kate be no relation. i'm sorry. fighter cnn newsroom up next the sister. >> he news lately? >> israel is under attack, anti-semitism like i never thought i would see jury about samantha's boy, max now he got spit on, just walking at penn i mean, that's scary. >> what about kamala? >> busy defending the squad? >> they, you know, trump, i never cared for. >> but at least i'll keep us saying, hey, i've never voted republican looking in my life, i am voting trump. >> and men are jc victory fund is responsible for the content of this message. >> ever worry that you're drinking too much take back control with, or health or health provides access to medication proven to help a daily pill to drink less the. quit drinking altogether qualify for treatment and or health.com you founded your kayak company because you love the ocean not spreadsheets you
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today and we'll also send this free guide. but now is the time the annual enrollment period 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.
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