tv Erin Burnett Out Front CNN October 31, 2024 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT
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homeserve. com kids across hungry. >> millions of kids every day. >> but one simple thing can help change all of this. for a hungry child in america. good healthy food and the energy it brings with help from caring people across america. no kid hungry is providing healthy meals and hope to hungry kids so they can build better futures. to learn more about ending child hunger in america, go to help no kid hungry org. >> today have i got news for you saturday at nine on cnn >> donald trump, the only candidate found liable by a jury of sexually abusing a woman, once again claims he will be women's protector and adds whether they like it or not. also tonight, new cnn battleground polling john king breaks it down we're joined by senior harris campaign adviser david plouffe and donie o'sullivan reports on the step by step plans that influential trump supporters are making to
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overturn the election. if trump loses again. good evening. thanks for joining us for a second straight day, the two presidential campaigns are sharing geography. the vice president tonight about to speak in reno, nevada, and after that in las vegas, where jennifer lopez will be joining her on stage. lopez, just one of many well-known artists of puerto rican heritage who are rallying behind harris now, especially after one of the speakers at trump's rally in new york on sunday called puerto rico a floating island of garbage. her reno event is expected to begin shortly. the former president is in henderson, nevada, and has an event with tucker carlson later tonight in glendale, arizona. he was also in new mexico today, where he falsely suggested that he won the state twice in fact, he lost by eight points in 2016 and double digits in 2020. but we're starting off with what he said last night in green bay wisconsin, which became the latest of several campaign soundbites, not always from the candidates themselves, that have put one side or the other on the defensive saying, no, i want to protect the people. >> i want to protect the women
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of our country. i want to protect the women. sir, please don't say that. why? they said we think it's. we think it's very inappropriate for you to say so. why i'm president. i want to protect the women of our country. well i'm going to do it. whether the women like it or not. >> now, the reason he's claiming his advisers told him, please don't say that. it doesn't sound great. it's very inappropriate for you to say that is because of what he said not long ago at another rally, speaking to the women of america you will be protected and i will be your protector women confident and free about abortion. it's all they talk about abortion. >> it's all they talk about. those women abortion. somehow he's going to make it so you
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no longer even think about abortion. so here's what the vice president said about trump's new remarks today in phoenix. the ones about him being women's protector, whether the women like it or not he simply does not respect the freedom of women or the intelligence of women to know what's in their own best interest and make decisions accordingly but we trust women it's no surprise why trump advisers might suggest he not go down this road. >> first of all, as i mentioned, a jury this year found trump liable for sexually abusing a woman. he also is on tape boasting about how he could sexually assault women because he's a star. and then there's the denigration of any woman who opposes him or confronts him, or just asks him a hard question that he doesn't like he was by far the nastiest to joe biden. >> there was nobody nastier than her. she was extraordinarily nasty to kavanaugh. she was nasty to a level that was just a horrible
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thing. she was probably nastier than even pocahontas by the racist attorney general of new york state letitia. peekaboo james in the wings. they've got a local racist democrat district attorney in atlanta. how about low iq? maxine waters? >> omarosa is obviously the ultimate villain, and the nastiest. i think it's a very nasty question when you ask nasty tone. what a stupid question. but i watched you a lot. you ask a lot of stupid questions so a lot to cover tonight, starting with cnn's priscilla alvarez in north las vegas, where vice president harris will be appearing later. >> so how much do you expect to hear tonight from vice president about trump's comments well these comments played directly into the vice president's core message about freedoms and more specifically reproductive freedoms. >> polls have indicated that
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she has an edge on the former president when it comes to women and so that is what she's been playing into over the course of today. she started responding to this in the morning, and we have seen that already at her rally in phoenix. we expect it again in reno and then again in las vegas. and the reason for that, anderson, is because this is an issue that senior campaign officials believe reproductive freedoms in particular is one that will galvanize voters to the polls. they saw it in 2022, and they expect to see it again, particularly again with women. so when the former president makes remarks like this, they are happy to seize on it. and recently we've seen the campaign deploy a strategy of rapidly responding to the former president especially when he makes comments like this. so certainly here in las vegas, we are anticipating that the vice president is going to mention it again and continue to do so over the next several days because in a moment like this, they are focused on mobilization. and if they can use comments like this to mobilize voters, they're certainly going to do it anderson. >> and the vice president has
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seen kind of a rallying of very well-known artists lopez, as i said, is going to be at this event correct? later in las vegas that's right and this was a bit of an unexpected boost. >> i've been talking to sources in the campaign about this, because what we saw over the last several days was latino artists coming out in full force to support the vice president after those comments made at former president donald trump's rally in new york city from a comedian assailing puerto momentum especially in the puerto rican community so the vice president and her team have been trying to build on that through ads, but also to try to appeal to latino voters. they are crucial of course, in a state like nevada and also in arizona. but in nevada, the vice president is pretty evenly split, with former president donald trump in the polls. among latinos she is trying to gain an edge here, especially a day before early in-person voting ends. that ends tomorrow. mail-in ballots will continue, and then in-person voting will commence again on
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tuesday. but the timing here is no coincidence. jennifer lopez, in particular, has been very outspoken since the former president's rally, so we may hear more from her today on that. but certainly this stop here as much as she has been trying to appeal to women by criticizing the former president, former president's comments, she is certainly also trying to make a play here for latino voters knowing that the polls still show them pretty split. >> yeah. priscilla alvarez thanks so much. joining us, our political analyst commentators and campaign vets from across the partisan spectrum, van jones gretchen carlson david axelrod and erin perrine. gretchen, i mean how i mean, this phrase that donald trump used, whether they like it or not, how do you think this is landing well, thank you for coming to me first, as a woman who fights for equal rights for women and to stop silencing women and have done so for the last 8 to 9 years. >> this is highly offensive. i think what's so ominous about the way in which he said this that's different from when he said it a month ago, is that this time, he said, whether they like it or not and let's be clear there's a long history
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of trump being accused of doing things to women that they probably didn't like. so case in point, he took away roe v. wade. the majority of women in this country did not want that to happen. number two, more than a dozen women have accused him of sexually assaulting them in some way. i'm sure they did not want that to happen. number three, he said that because he was a powerful man, he could grab women by the excuse my french, and that they probably wouldn't care. and number four, he was convicted of sexual assault of e. jean carroll and is going to owe her millions of dollars so i don't want to just say this because it's halloween tonight but this is the handmaid's tale and women on tuesday, may be looking down the barrel of a real life handmaid's tale his i mean, the whole comment about i did think of handmaid's tale, handmaid's tale, you know his comment like women will be happy they will be healthy, they will be free. >> they will no longer have to
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think about abortion. that's all they talk about right now. >> he read that off a prompter, too. who writes that i mean, much less what he says. but it reflects, i think, an attitude. it's interesting because he's saying this just at a time when the harris campaign began a very impactful ad on abortion rights and reproductive rights with video of him, you remember back to the first campaign when he said women should be punished, who have abortions and chris matthews, who was doing that interview, asked him again, you know, so you think women should be punished? women who have. and he said, yes, they should be punished. so that is you know, aside from the the sort of, uh, you know, the juxtaposition of how he behaves and what he says there is this patronizing uh, tone to it and that back then was like shocking. yeah. but it seemed impossible. but now what we've seen in the country, it suggests that he's followed
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through on his on his belief about that, erin. >> i mean, it's also just interesting that trump, you know, would just flat out say, yeah, his advisers warned him against making those comments. but i guess he thinks this is a sign of his brilliance or strength or i don't know what, that he goes ahead and makes them again strategy is behind it, and i think the strategy in the closing days should be talking to voters about what matters to them. >> i feel like i've been saying this for months. apparently i'm just on repeat. you need to be talking about the economy. you need to be talking about immigration. but also let's remember here that while we're talking about donald trump's comments, there are still comments coming from the other campaign denigrating women. i heard mark cuban today say while he was sitting on a private jet, that donald trump doesn't have any smart, intelligent women around him ever i think siouxsie wiles donald trump's campaign manager, might vehemently disagree with that notion i think lara trump, as the rnc co-chair, might disagree with that notion and i think linda mcmahon, the head over at
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america first, which is the policy portion of what trump's team is trying to do might disagree with that notion in the closing days, both campaigns are going to be taking these clips and moving them aggressively to try and drive out more voters that's what everybody is going to do. and if you heard donald trump today and you're a republican and you're a woman, you said, yeah, he's going to be my fighter. that's what i signed up for and if you're a democrat or you're or you're a woman, that's leaning against him, you're going to say the same thing that's the guy i completely expected to see there and now it's about getting the message out to the point, though, of course, erin, obviously, mark cuban writing on a plane, he is not donald trump. this is the candidate who wants to be president. mark cuban, i guess, is a surrogate or is a supporter of harris, who's out there just speaking. i hear what you're saying, but and joe biden, the sitting president of the united states, right, right up what he said, which which which immediately he immediately tried to clean up what he said, change what he said. >> i voters can make up that decision. but this candidate has never tried to clean up
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what he said. he has now just repeated it. and that's that's a problem and i think that doubling down is is is a misstep by the campaign it's not a problem for a candidate ever to acknowledge fault and to admit change for any candidate in any situation yeah. um, then, uh lebron james i think has now endorsed, uh, kamala harris. is that a big deal? i think i think it's a big deal i do just want to say, at the risk of being controversial, i do think that women need to be protected from people like donald trump. i mean, donald trump is exactly the kind of person that women are trying to protect themselves from someone who has no respect, who has no regard, who won't listen. and so, and i think that mark cuban should not have said that but he may have been thinking about laura loomer more than he was thinking about the women that were just discussed. but lebron james coming out is a big deal because the ad he posted is so powerful i mean, he posted an ad that if you if you're an
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african-american person and you were thinking about thinking about thinking about voting for donald trump, you would probably keep your mouth shut at the dinner table because the ad he posted goes after every single thing that's come out of donald trump's mouth that would offend any self-respecting black man or woman. and it is a i think it's a very big deal. and there's a lot of attention on him right now because his son played with him. so lebron james always dominant is even more dominant in the public mind. is that an ad that's put out by the harris campaign? i don't know where it came from. i've never seen any place except on his thing. and he wrote what are we even talking about here? i am proud to endorse you think, uh, is it too late? and do you think you know i guess if it's aimed at black men, is will people actually pay attention to it i think because the black men that we're most worried about are probably not early voters. and so i do think that there are a number of younger african-american men who have not gone to vote. and so you're going to see a big just like you're seeing a big push in the latin community. you're going
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to see a big push in the black community to get the folks who are very, very passionate about trump. they've already voted. you're very, very passionate about kamala. you probably already voted. the people who might vote for trump have not voted and this is a i encourage everybody to look at lebron's ads and other people. you should be doing ads like lebron james david, i want to play something that jd vance said on joe rogan's podcast i wouldn't be surprised if me and trump won just the normal gay guy vote because again, they just wanted to be left the hell alone. >> and now you have all this crazy stuff on top of it. if you are a you know, middle class or upper middle class white parent, and the only thing that you care about is whether your child goes into harvard or yale, like obviously that pathway has become a lot harder for a lot of upper middle class kids but the one way that those people can participate in the di bureaucracy in this country is to be trans uh okay. i mean so
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the idea that that people are having, you know, surgery in order to get into these colleges i listen, i mean, i know parents will go really far to get their kid into a good school. and jd vance, by the way, knows something about. yeah, you know, using your your, you know, using something to get your way in. >> yes, yes. he got some preferences because of his background and his story. uh you know, but but also, i also love that, i guess gay people are now accepted by progress. this was to me was at first i was like, oh, jd vance thinks there's normal gay people. so i guess that's this is this is that's sort of progress but i'm curious to know what the different how where the line is between a normal gay person and a not normal gay person. >> i mean, the question is, i'm assuming i can guess what it is like. you know anything related to drag, i guess in,
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you know, that drag you know, wearing as much makeup as donald trump wears, that would be considered not normal it's fine for donald trump, but on a gay guy that wouldn't be considered normal. >> the other point is, the one that aaron was making is this the way they want to close a campaign? is this really what they want to be talking about? she was right. his campaign, i mean, they have been running these trans ads, but they've also been focused on the economy and immigration. and so on. and all of these detours are not the way you want to be closing a campaign. and it i mean i know a lot of normal gay guys, and they're not breaking that. i haven't heard a lot of them breaking this way. >> yeah, apparently jd vance knows them too. yes. >> as a parent, that just went through the whole college process with two children, i just have to admit that i never thought about having them be trans to have an upper edge to, to get into college so i think that's a disservice to people who go through this personally within their families. i'm sure
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that, you know, it's not easy because of the way that you're treated when you come forward. and so to say that people are actually going to go through this process to get into school is crazy. >> and i just want to point out, in case jd has forgotten, he went to yale there are no shortage of upper middle class white kids at our ivy league schools. this idea that if you're an upper middle class white kid, you cannot get it just please go to any of our ivy league schools. they are everywhere. that is not happening. >> legacies. yeah. and some exactly. some of them have the last name of the of the buildings are going in which by the way yeah. me yeah. >> actually i don't cooper but i know my van jones gretchen carlson david axelrod erin perrine, thanks so much. we should note that david's 600th episode of the ax files podcast is now out. i was honored to be a part of it. i got to interview david on his podcast about the 600th episode. you can listen to it right now at cnn.com. we talk about and you're going to hear some really amazing, very personal interviews he's done surprisingly intimate interviews with people like barack obama, nancy pelosi, justice sotomayor and a whole
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bunch of other people. a lot of sports figures, too, who i didn't know who they were. >> but it was really fascinating. >> and it's out now wherever you get your podcast. thank you for doing that. no, it was great. next, as we look at the harris event in reno, we'll be joined by her senior campaign advisor david's colleague on the obama campaign, david plouffe. plus john king on the road in battleground michigan, breaking down new polling on the race there and two sunbelt battlegrounds, a >> if you're shopping for a home realtor.com only shows you homes for sale, sourced directly from professionals, meaning you can trust every home listing is a real listing. >> don't all apps do that? not really. trust the number one app. real estate professionals trust if you're living with hiv imagine being good to go without daily hiv pills good to go unscripted, good to go on a whim with cabenuva, there's no pausing for daily hiv pills for adults who are undetectable cabenuva is the only complete long acting hiv treatment you
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she really? would you have done something differently than president biden? >> there is not a thing that comes to mind in terms of, and i've been a part of, of, of most of the decisions. >> in other words she wants more of the same more inflation, more open borders, more disastrous foreign policy why would anyone vote for more of this restoration? pac is responsible for the content of this advertising from the creators of forrest gump. >> everybody ready? tom hanks? >> hey dad, i'd like you to meet margaret. tom hanks. >> time sure does fly, doesn't tom hanks. >> thank you for bringing us together experience here in theaters nowdot com
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million veterans every year. >> my victory is overcoming my wounds so i can help other veterans support more victories for veterans. >> go to dav dot org five good things. listen wherever you get your podcasts rally tonight in reno, nevada. >> her first of two events in the state this evening. the former president was also in nevada reason for being there. the race could hardly be closer. no. clear leader in cnn polling there from tuesday. and there are new cnn numbers out tonight from battlegrounds georgia and north carolina and other polling from michigan, where cnn's john king is tonight. so what do the polls show about enthusiasm for the candidates in north carolina and georgia fascinating. >> and all of these polls in every state are showing a dead heat. so what do you do? you look deep into the polls to try to find any clues you can about what the dynamics are in the final days of the campaign. let's just quickly take a look at north carolina. remember 2020? this was donald trump's narrowest win of his red
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states, right? joe biden was pretty competitive there. so it's on the board this time for the vice president. then georgia, of course did we learn in these new polls? look at this. when you come out here and you look at the enthusiasm for your candidates, you're voting for your candidate or you're voting against your candidate. a lot of democrats early in this campaign were saying they were voting against trump more than they were voting, even for president biden when he was the candidate. look, the trump base is for trump. we've known that since 2016. you see those high numbers but this is interesting. these are better numbers for the vice president than we have seen in other battleground states. essentially 70% or more than two thirds of her supporters say it's a vote for her, not a vote against trump. now, why is that? north carolina and georgia have two of the largest black voting populations. that is the democratic base. they were energized by the switch to kamala harris. they are the key. if she's going to pull off wins in those states, that is the key. and you see, anderson, they're enthusiastic. they're in it for her, not just against trump and what are voters saying about the biden administration's response to hurricane helene, which obviously impacted both georgia and north carolina right so
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this is interesting. >> look at these numbers and i'll bring them up here. you see the high disapproval. it's not a majority, but it's a high number in the 40s 44% in georgia 47%. nearly half in north carolina disapproving of the biden administration's response to the hurricane. now why is that? you've covered it on the program there has been a lot of misinformation, a lot of disinformation. and, frankly, from president trump and his allies, a lot of lies about the administration's response there. if you talk to local officials on the ground democrats and republicans, they will say the administration has done a pretty good job. there are always hiccups, but they've done a good job, and they've been on the ground getting supplies there. but you see that number 47% in north carolina disapprove. well, guess what happened today in north carolina? the harris campaign went up with a new ad from the popular democratic governor, roy cooper, talking about his relationship with her and saying, in the end she will help the state recover from the hurricane. so the harris campaign clearly sees these numbers and is trying to deal with them with that new ad. >> and in georgia and north carolina, i mean, are they is the is it statistically tied here or overall all the
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battlegrounds, every one of these battlegrounds? i'm going to flip the map here just to show you and come up to our race to 270. you see all seven of those, all seven of those yellow states on the map, those are the battleground states. they are all within a point or two. no clear leader. our polling shows the vice president a little bit ahead in michigan, and wisconsin. other polls, when you average them essentially shows this is within a point or two, either way, even if you have a 2 or 3 point lead, you're still in play in the final days. that's what makes this. we're five days out, anderson. that's what makes this race so fascinating. >> and you're in michigan tonight. the first stop on your five day tour of battleground states. how close is the race there well, again look at this one. >> here's a brand new one from the washington post tonight. 47 for harris, 46 for trump. right. so again statistically that's a tie. it's a dead heat. and again as i've said i'm a broken record on your program. but i always say average them out if you can. don't invest in any one poll. so if you look at the cnn poll of polls, that takes the five most recent reputable polls here in the state of michigan. and what do you have this one does show a slight advantage for harris. no. clear leader. you're not outside the margin of error, but you'd rather be at 48 than 45. and i can tell you just being here on the
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ground, we talk about this a little bit later in the program. i can talk about being on the ground, people, the democrats here feel better now than they did even just a few weeks ago when i was here again no statistical tie heading into the final five days, not just here in michigan but across the battlegrounds. here we go john king. thanks, john. we'll be back shortly with a report on michigan voters that he's been talking to over the last year, joining us now is harris campaign senior adviser, david plouffe, who we should mention ran former president obama's 2008 campaign. so david, you see new poll numbers georgia, north carolina. i mean, at this point do you do you care about i mean, are you paying attention to these polls well, i try not to pay too much attention to any poll that's not our own, anderson. >> uh, so but i think our data is consistent with what the public data is. and i think what probably the trump data is, which is, is a close race in seven states. i would just point something out in. one of the reasons that we're optimistic is let's say your poll, our poll, we think a race is 48, 47, 47, 47. that's not
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100% of the vote. so the question is the people who've not yet decided who to vote for, who are actually going to vote and our sense is in the last week the people who've made up their mind in the last week were doing quite well with. and we like the people who've yet to make a decision in terms of who who they look like from a data perspective and what they self report in terms of who they're more likely to vote for so that's important in the early vote that we're seeing so far we are on pace in all seven states. uh to reach the number we think we need combined with election day turnout but it's very important to look at who those undecideds are. obviously, a campaign like ours has a lot of sophisticated data. we look at this every day. we do quantitative research qualitative research. but as we look at how 100% of the votes going to get allocated in these seven battleground states, we think we have an advantage over the trump campaign we're looking live. >> vice president harris at her event in reno comments like the ones that trump made about protecting women, whether they like it or not, his rally this,
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you know, on sunday with the deeply offensive comments to jews, black people latinos and puerto ricans um, do those have an impact this late in the race they do. >> it's a terrible way to close a presidential campaign. and what's clear to me is, you know, trump will go out there you've seen anderson over the last day him complaining, having temper tantrums about things that aren't true in pennsylvania. it's because i'm sure he was briefed by his team that they don't like the pennsylvania numbers. he gets briefed that he has real trouble with women voters. we saw this in 20. we're seeing it now. this is how he reacts in a way that doubles down and exacerbates his problems. so yeah. and listen, we spend a lot of time with voters. we're at their doors when their communities, we also do a lot of qualitative research. we're listening to these undecided voters every hour of every day. and the madison square garden thing really broke through because what i've learned in politics is when something is consistent with what people
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think about you, they think that he's about chaos and division so that doubles down. the other thing we're picking up on, and cnn has spent some time on this, uh, in some of our discussions with undecided voters this notion that not notion, trump said he's going to put rfk jr. in charge of all the health care in the country that greatly worries these few percent of voters who haven't yet decided to vote. a, because they don't think rfk should be in charge of our health care. but a driving part of this race, anderson, is people are concerned that all the people that tried to check trump last time are now speaking out against him, warning the country that it would be dangerous and he's going to be surrounded by the rfk's of the world. and that very much concerns these voters, who are still making their decision in these closing days well, speaker johnson, you know, just yesterday or two days ago said, you know obamacare, uh, you know, he's now tried to walk that back. >> do you buy this theory that that sort of whispered by some, i guess, pushed by some that there may be large numbers or a significant amount of women
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voters who support harris but are not saying so publicly in their families or to pollsters. >> right well, listen, we're being very conservative in our own data. >> i think we've learned that in 16 and 20, you give trump trump a lot of strength both in terms of his turnout and his support scores, so that we can run the kind of campaign to overcome that. but yeah, i think if i'm surprised by anything on election night, it will be that differs than the data worlds is that maybe we do a point or two better with the women across the board, and obviously there are more than 50% of the vote. we're seeing. they're turning out in large numbers in early vote. so i think there's a potential for that for sure. and i think that would be with independent women voters and republican women voters. so and comments like trump made yesterday about protecting women, whether they wanted it or not, is like nails on a chalkboard for these voters. >> david plouffe, thank you so much. >> thanks, anderson. >> coming up next, how the so-called stop the steal movement, which, let's be clear, is based on lies and
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misinformation, is gearing up to challenge the 2024 election results, with one supporter of the former president going so far as to say quote, january 6th is going to be pretty fun. we'll be right back to get roe v. >> wade terminated and i did it. he did it. >> it was pretty devastating. >> he is bragging. >> bragging about the rights that he stole from american women and trump is promising to do more in 2025. >> they are restricting birth control, tracking pregnant women and forcing a nationwide abortion ban. the government should get out of my business, stay out of my business. >> that's not the government's business in america. women make their own decisions. >> i'm kamala harris, and i approve this message. >> look out. cause here i come. >> have you always had trouble losing weight and keeping it off? same. >> discover the power of wegovy. >> and i'm marching on to the beat i drum with wegovy. i lost 35 pounds and some lost over 46 pounds.
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and this is cnn vice president harris is nevada. these are live pictures. she's got another event in a few hours with jennifer lopez in north las vegas. we are still obviously days away from ballots being counted but supporters of the former president already pushing false claims of voter fraud and promoting lies about a rigged election. of course they did this four years ago and they made a lot of money off it. none of it was true. and now it seems they are gearing up doing it again. cnn's donie o'sullivan has more now on the multifront plan some trump supporters have to contest the election. >> it's like how much theft can they get away with in order to prevent trump from winning? >> do you think he's going to win? >> if we have a fair election, yes. >> there's no way he can lose. fairly fairly. there's no way he can lose. >> maga world is preparing its followers for a stolen election. >> we're just going to announce harris as the winner. we're going to go. we win again and now try to stop us again.
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>> and what's different? this time is we're going to be able to stop them. >> is there anybody here in north carolina ready to take this nation back by any means necessary? say, yeah. yeah yeah. >> they're laying out step by step plans to overturn a potential harris victory. these are not random trump supporters. these are influential figures in the maga movement. >> it's all going to depend on what they end up doing. i have a plan. and strategy for every single component of it. and then january 6th is going to be pretty fun. >> many of them, like ivan raiklin and michael flynn, have huge audiences online and are involved in election denying groups that have spent millions of dollars furthering election conspiracy theories. >> and we should know by tuesday night, by about 9 or 10:00 at night, that one party, one election officials across the country have explained that we likely won't know the full results on election night to conspiracy theorists, however, that is a sign of fraud in this
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case. >> i strongly believe that donald trump, if this thing is a fair election he'll win all 50 states. now if it's legit, we don't have to worry. right. but who thinks it's going to be legit? you think they're just going to give it to you? no, this is going to be a fight. >> raclin has encouraged people to pressure their state representatives not to certify election results if they suspect fraud. >> we try to play it fair. >> they steal it. our state legislatures are our final stop to guarantee a checkmate. be prepared. on january 1st to apply the maximum motivation to your state reps, state senators and north carolina. he and other right wing activists are going as far to say there should be no election because of the destruction after hurricane helene. they say the republican controlled state legislatures should decide which presidential candidates gets their electoral college votes. we don't have to do this popular vote in the state stuff for this federal election. we don't have to do
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it. >> you got 120 house reps how many of those are republican the majority. how about how is the house body going to likely vote with your motivation for the republican nominee? what about the senate majority? >> the idea is fringe and it is extreme but a republican congressman endorsed raclin. i would say, hey, look, you got disenfranchized in 25 counties. you know what that vote probably would have been, which which would be if i were in the legislature not to go. yeah, we got to convene the legislature before eventually walking it back. the idea that the only way harris can win is if the election is stolen, is being pushed across hundreds of maga media outlets and from the former president himself,
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because they cheat. >> that's the only way we're going to lose, because they cheat. >> and it's convincing his base. >> what if the results show that harris won? do you think trump will accept that? >> i don't think anybody will accept that because we know it's going to be a lie. but but but if that's what it is, it's what it is. we'll go from there. we'll have to see what happens. so i just don't think that trump's going to lose. >> do you think he won last time? >> oh, definitely. >> what happens if he loses? >> if he loses, we're all going down january 6th. >> donie o'sullivan joins me now. i mean, a lot of the people who are pushing this, i mean, mike flynn, these guys are making money off this, right? >> oh, they sure are, anderson. yeah, i mean, we even spoke last night about how rudy giuliani and the pillow guy are selling coffee and pillows and everything else so, look, there is money. there's money to be made in this grift. there's money to be made in selling fear. and also, you know, a lot of these folks are also telling their viewers that, you know, the fed is about to collapse the dollar is about to
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collapse. so therefore, put all your life savings into gold and silver and you know, the alex jones's of the world telling people to buy frozen or freeze dried food. but look, i think what's more important here is the money that is behind these guys that you're seeing in that piece the degrees of separation between them and the trump campaign. it's there's not many steps, right? they are involved in groups that have tens of millions of dollars behind them collectively in terms of challenging a challenging integrity in elections and pushing a debunked election conspiracy theory. so these guys are serious. >> donie o'sullivan, thanks so much. joining me now is new york democratic congressman dan goldman. it is remarkable that all these lies that were told four years ago, which disproven. thrown out of court. nothing to it are just being repeated now. >> yeah. the difference is they're very specific right now about what? how the the i mean, not not necessarily about
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how the fraud will happen, but that there will be fraud and there is fraud without specifying what it is of course. but this is before the election. we're five days before the election. so the difference is this is a very premeditated plan. they have filed lawsuits in numerous courts because they ran into problems last time in their view, with standing, meaning that they had no claim to actually make that there was fraud. so they're filing all these lawsuits preemptively so that they can then follow up. it is clearly a much more sophisticated scheme. it is much more well thought out. >> and it could be worse this time because it's more sophisticated and more well thought out what i think that it is going to be more advanced and more
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sophisticated whether. >> but i also think the states are are better prepared. um, certainly congress tried to shore up some of these rules with the electoral count act of 2022, but there's no question that this is the plan. and you hear trump laying the foundation for it already. um, and just the notion that a that kamala harris cannot win a free and fair election is so preposterous. >> the i want to play something that the former president addressed to mike johnson at his rally in madison square garden the other day i think with our little secret, we're going to do really well with the house right? >> our little secret is having a big impact. he and i have a secret. we'll tell you what it is. when the race is over. >> speaker johnson released a statement in response saying, by definition, a secret is not to be shared, and i don't intend to share this one. later on, he downplayed it, saying the secret actually involved get out the vote efforts. um, do you have trust in the leadership of the house to to
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ensure the results of the election? >> i have trust in the leadership of hakeem jeffries to certify the election. i have no trust in mike johnson. mike johnson was the architect of an amicus brief that tried, went to the supreme court to try to overturn the last election. um, and he has been very clear that he is ready, willing and able to serve donald trump. the more interesting quote in response to that statement was from the trump campaign. they said oh, the little secret is just about tele rallies that trump is having with about get out the vote first of all, if he's doing get out the vote by tele rallies, he should join the 21st century. they're much better and more effective ways of doing it but more importantly, that's a very routine and standard thing. that's not a little secret for somebody who doesn't turn over his medical records, doesn't turn over his taxes, has secret conversations with vladimir putin et cetera. et cetera. so when you know my spidey ears
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went up, because when someone gives a completely implausible explanation, it begs a lot more questions. and if mike johnson is the speaker of the house, he could do a lot of things to mess with the certification of the electoral college. last time around, it was focused on vice president pence because nancy pelosi was the speaker of the house. if it is the republicans who have the majority after tuesday there, all bets are off as to what they would be willing to do. >> congressman dan goldman, thanks so much appreciate it. still ahead, more from john king in battleground michigan. he's talking with college students who are helping to get out the vote for the two campaigns. what they have to say about the election in this final stretch. part of john's all over the map series that's next news night with abby phillip tomorrow at 10:00 eastern on cnn. medicare advantage helps me do my job better because it makes me feel comfortable that these patients
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purple mattresses. exclusive gelflex grid draws away heat, relieves pressure and instantly adapts sleep better live purple five days out. >> as you saw earlier from john king, new polling shows a razor thin race in battleground michigan with 15 electoral votes at stake. the state is part of the so-called blue wall along with wisconsin and pennsylvania that often paves the path to the white house. the three states have been democratic strongholds for decades. that's until 2016, when trump won all of them. four years ago, biden gained them all back. more now from john in michigan. he spoke with college students, playing a key role for the election as he continues his all over the map series republican headquarters five days out if president trump can count on you in his support in this election. >> a basement phone bank shift. ralph brennan among the michigan state students helping turn out the vote. >> i think there's a red wave coming, especially in michigan. and i think people will be very surprised on how many people
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vote republican in this election. >> brennan is 21, a junior economics major from ohio, but he registered in michigan for his first vote for president. >> i was a sixth grader when trump got elected in 16, and i watched him, you know, come to the white house. i watched the inauguration. i watched all the great things he did. >> trump struggled with young voters in 2016 and 2020. brennan predicts better numbers this time especially among young men. >> john goodbye, boys. thank you guys and especially after robert f. >> kennedy jr. ended his campaign and backed trump. >> i've heard a lot of young guys say how much how important rfk was to their president trump vote you know, ever since trump kind of brought rfk onto the team, onto the campaign, a lot of young young men, voters really, really liked that and kind of resonate with with rfk and what he's done in a dead heat race organization can be the difference halloween spirit helps just cookies to treats as well. will you fill out one of
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our pledge to vote things? >> jade gray is a progressive organizer, former co-president of the college democrats here at the university of michigan back on campus to encourage early voting. >> we know that when we vote, we win. and quite frankly, we're getting a lot of people out to vote. >> gray's optimism is a big shift. this is our fourth ann arbor visit in a year. back at the beginning, she was down about president biden's prospects and later she was worried. vice president harris would still lose too many young voters because of student anger over the israel-hamas conflict. >> have you guys voted yet? okay. yay! thanks. but she is upbeat now and credits a mix of constant organizing and a smarter approach from the harris campaign. >> it was not just the candidate that switched but it was really their whole approach to the campaign. and leaning into this idea that memes and internet culture is a, you know, a mode of communicating about politics has totally transformed this race. and i think will be, you know, one of the biggest reasons to one of the biggest things we should credit i'm saying when but if
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she wins john joins us again from ann arbor. >> so what are the college students say matters to them most when casting their vote has been a shift. >> now you hear about student loan debt, you hear about the economy, you hear about their objections to trump and his rhetoric, his rhetoric on lgbtq issues, his rhetoric on immigration issues. they think the vice president is younger. they think she's more hip, more interesting on the internet. as you heard, jade gray there say there at the end. that's a very different mood. you heard jade gray at the end there. my first trip here, anderson, was a year ago. this is my fourth trip here. she was a lot more despondent then. biden was the candidate. she was down. even after the switch to harris. she was still about her chances. much more upbeat now because of activity on campuses. i just want to quickly bring in the wall and just show you. so we're in washtenaw county. that's where the university of michigan is. earlier today we saw that young republican voter. we were up in ingham county. both of these counties are big blue counties. and on the college campuses, you see a lot of early voting. you do see a lot of energy and look, this
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is a very tight, competitive race. but the harris people feel better now than they did just a few weeks ago. >> and how does the war in gaza play into all this well that's a fascinating question because remember i came back from one of my pieces here and i was with you in new york on the set when we were here. >> there was a big encampment, and there was a big protest, not only against the university administration, but against the biden administration. and that carried over against the vice president. the university won't allow encampments anymore. so you don't physically see the anger. i was talking to jay gray because he does a lot of online organizing. she says. you do still see some of it online, but she is convinced many of those students are still going to vote for harris, even though they're angry at the administration because they think trump would be even worse on those questions. anderson john king, thanks. next, i want you to hear from a remarkable woman. she's 93 and survived being sent to auschwitz when she was just 13. she's my guest in the latest episode of my podcast, all there is you'll hear from her in a moment about how she survived and how she lives with unimaginable grief
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>> it's nerve wracking. the whole country is on the edge of their seats unprecedented. this race could not be any closer. >> an election like no other. and it all comes down to this. >> we can now make a major projection election night in america. >> from the first votes to the critical count, a lot of us thought that it would come down to this the way only cnn can bring it to you election night in america. >> special coverage begins tuesday november 5th at 4:00 on cnn and streaming on max. >> are you tired of your hair breaking after waiting years for it to grow new pantene with more pro vitamins, plus biotin and collagen repairs, as well as the leading luxury bonding brand, stronger, healthier hair without the $60 price tag. if you know you know it's pantene >> you destroy yourself i'm like, you i keep my promises. don't miss the epic return of yellowstone, premiering sunday, november 10th at eight only on
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i'm eva mckend traveling with the harris-walz campaign and this is cnn new episode of my podcast. >> all there is is available now wherever you get podcasts. you can also point your cell phone camera. right now, the qr code on the bottom of the screen to listen to it. i talked this week with an extraordinary survivor of the nazi extermination camp at auschwitz. it was originally something i shot for 60 minutes. irene weiss was deported to auschwitz, along with nearly half a million hungarian jews in 1944. 80% of
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those people were killed immediately in gas chambers. irene's parents, her three brothers, her little sister edith they were all murdered there. irene and her older sister survived. irene was just 13 years old, and the grief she felt well, she's felt at her entire life since then you were do you still feel that little girl at times, or did you bury her early on in auschwitz? that's a good question. that's really a very good question i am stuck there. i am really stuck there and that's really the biggest fight and and that's where all the, the grief is have you been able to cry in subsequent years still not still not you know, people say broken heart soul never forgets.
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>> there is a soul that does not forget any of it. it's imprinted on the soul that keeps the memory, the pain, the grief. it's just always there. >> can you hear more of the conversation? it's available right now. wherever you get your podcasts. again, you can point the camera at the qr code on the screen. another way to access it is to go to cnn.com forward slash all there is online. it's our new online grief community. you connect with me there and others living with grief. you can leave comments, share your own experiences with grief and watch a video version of that podcast and all the other podcast episodes. they're also available on the cnn channel on youtube. the news continues right here on cnn dueling rallies in nevada. >> as harris seizes on trump's latest promise to women and former president obama slamming donald trump as he makes the case for voters of color to support the vp plus, a new report revealing trump has nearly $2 billion in debt, a number that has
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