tv CNN News Central CNN March 7, 2025 4:00am-5:00am PST
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>> jerusalem. similarly economic i'm focused on what's going on with tariffs. >> come on. >> i mean. >> that's i mean. >> yeah i guess that's where. >> the tariff. >> news, it changes every hour. it's dramatic. you never know what's going to happen. and i think it's really important to keep an eye on these kind of day to day changes. because if you're really in the know and plugged in like us, you're following this sort of thing. but that chaos is really, really difficult for, you know, smaller businesses to, to keep track of and how that's going to change their outlook. >> yeah. to your point, i'm going to be looking for reaction. will we start to see more people speak out whether they be small business owners. maybe they they be lawmakers? i'm kind of curious where you start to see that appear. i want to thank you guys for waking up with me, having such a good time chatting. i'm audie cornish, and stay with us because cnn news central starts right now.
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>> all right. standing by for a huge jobs report, a health check on the economy in a week where investors have been telling the president they're feeling a little queasy from the big money flip flops, what axios just called the rug pull presidency. >> is the honeymoon over? >> trump puts new. >> limits on elon musk after weeks of sweeping government layoffs. trump telling his cabinet in a meeting they are in charge of cutting the federal workforce, not his billionaire advisor. wielding the chainsaw. >> a former. >> canadian olympic snowboarder now on. >> the fbi's ten most wanted list, accused of running a transnational drug ring and ordering several murders. i'm kate bolduan with john berman and sara sidner. this is cnn news central
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all right. >> happening now. grab on to something that is tied down. fasten your seat belts, gird your loins, do all of those things to prepare for what could be a wild day for the economy, coming at the end of what has been a dizzying and for investors, pretty depressing week. we're standing by for the release of the february jobs report that will give a window, albeit a partial one, into the state of the economy. a private survey yesterday found some of the largest job cuts in years. the report this morning will not capture the mass federal layoffs driven by elon musk when he was still using a chainsaw, not a scalpel. more on that in just a moment. any worker who has accepted a buyout is technically still a government employee, and the report today also really only covers until the middle of last month. but investors and economists are looking for signs of what seems to be shakier economic ground. and they've been sending clear signals. they do not like the wild swings, the quick attacks and even quicker retreats from president trump
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and his self-imposed trade wars. let's get right to cnn's vanessa yurkevich for this report. it's a coming. >> it's a coming. >> and this is going to be. >> the first. >> full jobs report that we're. >> seeing under the trump administration. so they are going to be watching this closely. here's the expectation. economists are predicting 160,000 jobs added unemployment rate really remaining quite historically low at about 4%. and 160,000 jobs added is actually more than what we saw in january. and that's a good number. it's obviously coming off the highs that we saw towards the end of last year and the pandemic highs that we have seen. but it's worth noting that if we do. there you go. you have those numbers over the last couple of months, but it's worth noting that we have had 49 months of consecutive job growth. that is the second longest streak on record. and as you mentioned, john, this is really coming on the background of all of this economic uncertainty, particularly for businesses. they want to be able to plan. are they hiring. are
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they firing. we got that report from challenger gray yesterday that showed that businesses are planning to cut 172,000 jobs. that's more than 100% increase from the month before. we should point out most of those job cuts are coming in government under doge because of doge. but as you mentioned, that will not be picked up in this report that we're going to be seeing in about the next hour. but what we have seen in the markets this week has just been those wild swings. we know that the markets react to news, especially economic news. i think we have a screen that can just show you what. yeah look at that. up down up down. i think futures right now at last check were up. but they are going to be watching this very closely. this is sort of the end to what has been a week of really, really dynamic economic news and trade policy, which i think we're still trying to figure out what that ultimately means for the economy and for businesses who are trying to plan for their futures. >> i mean, the president seems to be trying to figure out exactly what that trade policy
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is, and investors don't really like the fact that he still seems to be thinking about it. vanessa yurkevich this will be interesting over the next several minutes. thanks so much for explaining it, sarah. >> it has been a wild ride. all right this morning trump changing it up again after republicans face angry town halls and first buddy elon musk's falling approval ratings, musk first proposed a woodchipper to bureaucracy. then came the chainsaw. now, trump says a scalpel should be used, not a hatchet. woodchipper to scalpel a huge jump. so who will be the lead surgeon making these job cuts? what will this mean to the thousands of federal workers in limbo right now? wondering if they have jobs? kevin liptak is at the white house. kevin, a lot of questions. do you have any answers for us this morning? >> well, that's what trump is trying to do here. he's trying to clarify exactly who has the power in the federal government to cut the government down to size, who has the power of firing and hiring? and what
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he's saying here is, yes, he still supports elon musk, but it will be the cabinet officials. the senate confirmed heads of these agencies and departments who will have the ultimate say. what he's essentially trying to do here is reel in elon musk to temper some of how he has gone about what has so far been this indiscriminate attempt to cut the federal government down to size that have been causing so much concern among republicans who had been facing heat from their own constituents, but also from these cabinet members who, by and large, do support the overall mission but had some real questions about how musk was going about it. and certainly they had begun voicing some of those concerns to some senior officials here in the white house. that all culminated yesterday in this 90 minute meeting in the cabinet room. that's the same room where musk kind of held court with cameras rolling one week ago. this time there were no cameras, but it was president trump who said, with musk sitting there nearby, that it would be these cabinet officials who had the ultimate
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decision making power on the staffing within their own government, and that he wanted it to be less of a haphazard approach going forward, he said on social media. they can be very precise as who will remain and who will go. we say the scalpel rather than the hatchet. now, how this works in practice, i think, remains to be seen. and we heard president trump in the oval office shortly after this, saying that musk would still be making recommendations. listen to what he said. >> keep all the people you want, everybody that you need, people that aren't doing a good job, that are unreliable, don't show up to work, et cetera. those people can be cut. we're going to be watching them and elon and the group are going to be watching them. and if they can cut, it's better. and if they don't cut, then elon will do the cutting. >> so you hear trump there essentially putting these cabinet members on notice that yes, they have the final decision making power, but musk
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will still be looking over their shoulder to ensure this is all going according to plan. so you can easily see how that could turn into a power struggle down the line. the president did make clear that this would be an ongoing conversation. he said he would convene his cabinet members and musk for these types of meetings every two weeks. >> kevin liptak, thank you so much for all your reporting this morning. appreciate you kate. >> still ahead for us, in britain breaking overnight. no one is answering. i am freaking out. newly released text messages and 911 calls. in the case of the man accused of murdering the four idaho college students. there's new news coming in there, and at least two people are dead. now after russia launches a fresh barrage of attacks overnight targeting ukraine's energy infrastructure. and dolly parton remembering and honoring her late husband, carl dean, in the way only dolly can. quite frankly. releasing a new song out this morning i
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with xfinity. from the tee to the green, catch every pivotal moment of the players championship in crystal clear enhanced 4k. find tee times, tour your favorite holes and see live leaderboards and scorecards. and with xfinity multiview, never miss a moment. watch up to 4 live events at once. brought to you by comcast business, proud partner of the players. just say “the players championship” into your xfinity voice remote. >> march madness. it gives you all the feels. >> got the feeling. >> crowd going crazy. >> can you believe this? ice in the veins. emotions are on full display. this is what march feels like. i've got. >> that feeling. >> baby. breaking overnight. russia unleashing a new deadly wave of attacks across ukraine. at least two people were killed in the missile and drone strikes were targeting critical energy
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facilities. so these attacks, they also come at an important time, a critical time. just after ukrainian president zelenskyy was meeting with european leaders in brussels. zelenskyy plans then now to go to saudi arabia next week ahead of talks with the u.s. and about bringing an end to the war, of course. and zelenskyy is expected to present an initial cease fire plan ahead of talks with washington. cnn's nick paton walsh is in kyiv. he's got much more on all of this and there is a lot going on. you have these attacks overnight and then these huge talks coming up next week. what are you hearing about the talks? >> yeah, i mean, the talks are supposed to be bilateral and they are supposed to be senior trump administration cabinet officials. marco rubio secretary of state. and i think national security adviser. mike waltz talking to the ukrainian delegation led by president zelenskyy's chief of staff, andriy yermak. now zelenskyy will be in riyadh the day before. that is a visit that was delayed when he canceled the
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previous one, which was due to be around about the time of the last u.s. russia summit that was held in riyadh, that ukraine was not invited to. it's not clear if zelenskyy will hang around for the parts of the talks that come afterwards, but it's always a possibility. these are bilateral. the ukrainians very much understand, and there's not thought to be a russian presence there. but bear in mind this may not just be a meeting of healing. yes, they want to sign the rare earth minerals deal. both sides seem clear on that. but also we are seeing increased american pressure on the ukrainian side here through the pausing of military aid, through the pausing of intelligence sharing, which may be designed at this particular meeting to deliver, perhaps an ask for the actual technical details of what a peace deal will look like. meanwhile, the russian assault here is unrelenting 60 plus ballistic missiles fired, 30 of them taken out in the air by defense, including ukrainians using a french mirage 2000 jet for the first time to intercept
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the missiles. this is key because it's ukrainian patriot air defense that can take down these ballistic missiles, and that supply is, of course, stopped now and in question how much they have in their stocks. another issue too, while we discussed this diplomacy, the frontline situation for ukraine in some areas improving. but in one key place, kursk, the incursion they did into russian territory that is significantly at peril, it seems at the moment, with both russian and ukrainian bloggers saying that the key supply route to ukrainian forces from ukraine into a town called suzdal, which is their main kind of hub inside of russia, that that is currently under what they call fire control, that basically if you drive up and down it, you're probably going to get hit by the russian artillery or drones. that's a massive complicating factor for that entire presence in kursk. it was controversial since it happened in august. it is what president trump perhaps refers to when he talks about ukraine having cards. that's the only real one they seem to have at the negotiating table. in terms of territory. it's now
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under threat and possibly to the lack or the pause of american aid. certainly, the change in american support vocally may be having an impact now, and that's felt on the battlefield. back to you. >> and an impact already. yeah. nick, it's great to see you. thank you so much. john. >> all right. breaking overnight, three u.s. soldiers arrested, accused of sharing classified secrets with china. and from half court for 100,000. one basketball fan is waking up with a few extra zeros in his bank account this morning. also, i imagine some extra money. >> the united states of scandal. >> with jake tapper sunday at nine on cnn. >> bye bye. >> cough or chest congestion? hello. 12 hours of relief. >> 12 hours. not coughing. hashtag still not coughing. >> mucinex dm gives you 12 hours of relief from chest congestion in any type of cough, day or
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superstar luka doncic at the l.a. lakers. and now he's propelling them to an impressive win streak. joining us now is cnn's andy scholes. andy, run us through the highlights. people were mad in dallas. >> oh. >> oh, i. >> got a. >> lot of mavs fans. >> in. >> my. >> life. >> sarah, and they. >> are never going to get over. >> this situation, especially. watching what luka is doing with the lakers. he, lebron and the lakers. they've now won eight in a row, their longest winning streak since the 20 1920 season, during which they won the nba title. and they had a great game against the knicks last night. we're going to pick it up. fourth quarter in new york. down three under a minute to go. jalen brunson gets the bucket plus the foul. he's all pumpeds up. so is spike lee who was sitting courtside. we'd go to overtime in an ot. luka working on karl-anthony towns makes the fadeaway there. then the next time down luka the three. he finished with 32. and then under two to go play everyone in new york talking about this morning. brunson rolling his ankle badly
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on this play. he would make both free throws before exiting the game. lakers though they would go on to win 113 to 109 here with luka afterwards. >> and the lakers. >> i don't think we played good today. i think we have, especially for the first three quarters. i don't think we played good. so that just showed the whole group together. you know, everybody's cheering for each other, and we gave each other a push that we needed to win the games all right. >> steph curry meanwhile was just doing steph curry things last night in brooklyn right before halftime steph the turnaround three with less than a second left. and he just ran off to the locker room. steph made seven threes in this game. he scored 14 in the fourth and the final corner three here. put the game away. and then steph hit the nets with the night. night. celebration finished with 40 as the warriors won 121 to 119. golden state ten and one with jimmy butler in the lineup. all right. finally back to l.a., where a fan named mike had a
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chance for $100,000 if he can make the half court shot. and of course, we wouldn't be showing you this if he missed. he banked it in and he showed off his kobe tattoo that he had on his bicep. he was also wearing some kobe shoes. sarah. and you know, sometimes, you know, you look at the person that's shooting the half court shot and you're just like, this guy's going to make it. and i really had the feeling, seeing, seeing mike step up to the plate for that one. >> he did. he did a kobe right there. boom. like got it in. >> mamba mentality. >> it's totally it is sad to see brunson hurt because he's such a fun player to watch. no matter if he's on your team or not. he is a fun player to watch. >> and yeah, knicks fans, certainly fingers crossed that it's not too bad. we'll see. we'll wait and see today. >> all right. thank you andy. appreciate it kate. >> also a contagious cheer. knicks fans or not, i hear my kids all the time. jalen brunson. they yell it all over the house. >> it's great fun. >> and i remind them then that their father is a pistons fan. and then it's a whole issue
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anyway, here we go. coming up for us you're laid off. you're rehired. we're enacting tariffs. we're pausing tariffs. the fast action from the new trump administration has also led to some neck breaking whiplash. and we have a new look at how americans are feeling about that now. and then there's this a canadian olympic snowboarder now has a new title, one of the fbi's most wanted. what led to the fbi offering now $10 million for his arrest? >> sports is brought to you by sling. choose and customize your channel lineup or watch for free. sling lets you do that. >> i told you i don't need these anymore. >> i have sling okay. >> morning. >> i only left sling. >> deliver the news. i need to. >> stay informed. thank you very much. >> nice one. >> nope. >> sling gives us all the news
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wondering why your mother and i asked you here tonight. it's because it's a buffet of all you can eat. butterfly shrimp and sirloin steak. >> yeah. >> that is the. >> reason i thought it's because i made varsity. >> you did? >> of course you did. of course you did. >> billy. >> i need. >> help with the clicker. >> yeah. >> one second. >> grandma. >> this guy's gonna buy. >> my car. >> no, he's still there. >> okay. >> you need carvana. what's your plate number? >> boss? m o. >> v. >> vehicle features. no accidents. right? >> no. >> good. generating offer. carvana can pick it up tomorrow. >> that's an amazing offer. >> do you. >> still need help with the clicker? >> i'll ask your sister. >> sell your. >> car the easy way with carvana. >> the big dance. >> march madness. magic. >> on fire. abracadabra!
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>> kasie hunt today at 4. >> p.m. on cnn. >> so the white house right now is looking to invoke a rarely used rule to force people who file legal challenges against the government to pay up front at the start of a case. the move comes as the trump administration is fighting nearly 100 lawsuits actively in federal courts right now, and the battles are over. well, you've seen it play out before you on your television screens. everything from immigration to dni policies to spending freezes and efforts to shrink the size of the federal government. cnn's katelyn polantz joins us right now with much more on this. i mean, how does this rule work? >> well, kate, it's a rule that is part of how you're supposed to do things in court when you file a lawsuit and it's around whenever someone files an emergency action. so ask for a restraining order or an injunction, which is what a lot of these 100 or so suits are asking for from people trying to block trump administration
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policies. and this rule fine print type of thing that most people are not even paying attention to. i've never seen this used in court before. and when i was asking legal experts, have you ever seen this? they were laughing. wow, who found this? but it is something that is on the books that the trump administration can try and invoke. basically, it says that a court can require a plaintiff. so the people that are bringing the lawsuit and asking the court for emergency relief to post a bond at the start of that lawsuit that a judge would set so that number could be $0, or it could be $1 million, depending on the judge. and so that is what the white house now is encouraging agencies to go out there and ask for when they are fighting these suits in court. the way the white house characterizes it, they say that they want to push back against suits that may be frivolous, where the injunctions may not be successful because they believe
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that the people who are bringing these lawsuits are partisan and exploiting the courts. but there have been several successful situations where judges have stepped in and told the administration, we are going to give this injunction to the people that brought the lawsuit. we are going to stop potentially unlawful action here. so this is just an incredible move where someone really dug into the rules and is saying, oh, let's try this with judges in court. we'll see if judges are going to do it, though, requiring plaintiffs to put up money at the front of these emergency cases. kate. >> i mean, add this to the long list of like, stand by and let's see how this thing plays out. i mean, that's unchartered territory. once again, it seems. caitlin, thank you so much, jonathan. >> all right. i have a special guest here. why? we'll tell you in just a moment. this morning i want to give credit where credit is due. axios this morning, mike allen and his morning newsletter called it the rug pull
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presidency. president trump, he says, is building a reputation as the flip flopper in chief. the president, who, after announcing a bold new policy today, might well reverse it tomorrow. why it matters, he asks. in a chaotic world, the federal government normally acts as a stabilizing force. under trump, it's driving chaos. now. even before this was published just a few minutes ago, cnn's chief data analyst harry enten here was preparing something along those lines to explain what's happening out there. harry. yeah, i might be quick, john, but i'm not that quick that if something dropped a few minutes ago that i would be able to get it together so quickly. look, google searches for trump and chaos. look at this number up 320%. >> this term's average. >> week versus the first term. this 46 day stretch that. >> the trump. >> presidency has gone on has. >> the most. >> number of. >> searches for trump and chaos on record. >> the american. >> people are seeing this. they think that donald trump. >> is like butters in. >> south park.
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>> he is professor chaos. that is what is going on. the american. >> people at this particular point are going, what is happening here? they are seeing trump and they are associating him with the word chaos. and the markets, if there's one thing that stock markets investors don't like, what is that? yeah, they do not like uncertainty. they don't like chaos. how about trade policy. uncertainty index. >> this dates back. >> all the way since 1960. we are. >> dealing with. >> a record high. get this up 651% versus a year ago. one day. >> trump seems. >> to be for tariffs. the next day he doesn't. one day he seems like he's backing off tariffs. then he's threatening. >> to do. >> it a month from now. what we're seeing is chaos play out in this trade, uncertainty that. >> is playing out. >> in the stock market as well. traders, investors, americans are. channeling their inner vince lombardi saying, what the hell is going on out there? that's right. i mean, they may or may not like the tariff policy. what they like less, though, no matter what, is the wild reversal. they just need to know what's going on so that
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they can plan. all right. now we know that that wall street not happy with it. but what about main street? yeah. what about main street? do they think that all this chaos is good? is trump making changes too quickly, i.e. rushing changes without considering their impact? you got it here folks. 56%. the majority say that trump is making changes too quickly. they don't like. what's going on. they don't like what the rock is cooking compared to just 43% who say no. this trump presidency. we were talking about this going back since january 20th. right. we said, hey, maybe this trump presidency with susan wiles will be more on the tracks. it seems to have gotten off the tracks as far as the american people are concerned. and they simply put, do not like it. and thank you, harry, for the first time that butters and vince lombardi have ever been used in the same segment. and and the rock and the rock. sarah. >> i want what he's drinking. all right. thank you. the department of education is facing an uncertain future. this
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morning, president trump promising to dismantle the entire agency in an executive order. and we just heard from the secretary of the department of education, linda mcmahon, who said this on fox just moments ago. >> i'm sure they're fearful they're going to lose their jobs. >> i think. >> anytime there's talk about shutting a department down, you know, the employees that are there are concerned about their jobs, but they're good off ramps for them. and in a country where we right now have over 8 million openings in jobs, i think there would be a lot of places for them to go. we'd like to help them get there. >> i want to talk to you about what this means for our teachers. a daughter of a teacher for 33 years. my sister is a teacher in charleston, south carolina, and i want to talk about what? >> okay. joining us now is democratic congressman john mannion of new york. he sits on the committee on education and the workforce and is a former high school teacher. bless you. i think you were there for 28 years. that is a quite a feat, sir. first of all, do you accept that even without congressional approval, trump can essentially
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dissolve the department of education the same way he did with usaid? >> thank you so much. >> for having me on. first of all, what i'd like to say is, you know, teaching is the most gratifying profession you can be a part of, and it's one of the most challenging. and i was there for 28 years. i'm also a parent. it's clear that departments like the department of education must be created by congress. and then if we are going to make changes within them, it's going to require legislative action. we've seen and one of your previous spots talked about what happens in the courts. and this would clearly go into the courts. dismantling the department of education is going to cause chaos. it's going to cause chaos for kids. real chaos in red states and blue states, urban and rural communities. we love our public schools. where i'm from in central new york and the mohawk valley. they're the core of our communities. we trust our
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teachers. and i believe this action is shortsighted and illegal. >> what will crushing the department of education mean to parents, to children, and to teachers in in your state and states across the country? >> so the department of education legislation came out of that, like the individuals with disabilities in education act. and there are protections there so that all students receive a free, appropriate public education and individualized setting. i didn't just teach ap biology and chemistry. i also taught a 15 to 1 living environment class. it's the legislation that protects the funding that comes out of the department of education to make sure that these kids get the speech services they need, the individual services that they need. and when you strip away a department of education, that is intentional and protecting these kids and their rights and the parents that sat in those csa
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meetings that fought for the rights so that their kids could achieve their american dream and seek their passion. that's why we have the department i stand unapologetically with our public schools and oppose this action. >> all right. i want to talk to you about something else. in politics. there is this schism that seems to be happening, and it's been going on for quite some time between progressives and moderates, and they're sort of trying to find some of the moderates trying to find any common ground they can with republicans. but democrats lost ground to republicans in the 2024 election. and now punchbowl news is reporting that house minority leader hakeem jeffries and other party leaders brought in some of the democrats, including jasmine crockett, who have been the most feisty and vocal against trump. and they were dressed down for that. what do you think of that? >> well, listen, i am not aware of that. i know this, i know where i'm from. i've lived in
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central new york, in syracuse my entire life, so i understand my community. and we are a down the middle district, so i have to work with republicans and democrats, and i've been successful in doing so. and i think the people of my region have responded to that. so you have to be a good reflection of your district. i believe that i'm a good reflection of my district. when i was a state senator just a short time ago, 29 of my 33 municipalities that i represented were run by republicans. so we all need to work together. we do, but we also need to stand up for what's right in central new york. we know right from wrong. and some of these actions are not just wrong, they're unconstitutional. it's our job to stand up and call that out regardless of party. >> the midterms are less than a couple of years away. you were able to beat a republican incumbent in your district. what lessons should democrats learn about how you did that well,
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listen, i believe that over the course of my lifetime, i have deep connections and have earned the trust of individuals, parents, trust teachers. >> i was a teacher for 28 years. i was a teacher in an urban setting, but also for about the last 20, i was in a suburban conservative, a conservative leaning area of the region. so i served in a very apolitical way. i represented teachers while i was still teaching. but you got to know your communities. and in central new york, we had some difficult times with the manufacturing job losses of the 70s, 80s and 90s. i watched our elected officials be strong advocates, be positive, be diplomatic, and work with everyone. that's what works with my district. and i know that other elected officials and candidates, they know their districts. they've got to work for their district and work to represent everybody. i believe my success was because of my deep roots there and my ability
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to work with everyone and call out my own side when necessary. >> congressman john mannion, thank you so much. appreciate you coming on this morning. and thank you for all your many years of teaching in the public school district. i know that is not easy, but it can be quite rewarding. >> thank you so much. >> all right. this morning, health officials in new mexico are investigating if measles caused the death of an unvaccinated person who tested positive for the disease. according to the new mexico health department, the individual had not sought medical attention since the outbreak began. new mexico has confirmed ten measles cases, all in l.a. county. six cases in adults, four in children. the county shares a border with west texas, which remains the epicenter of the major outbreak where the virus has infected at least 159 people and killed a child. kate. >> coming up for us, something happened in our house. newly released text messages and 911
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calls now shedding new light on the horrifying night when four idaho college students were killed in their home and giant fireballs streaking through the sky. lots of videos coming out after the. space star explodes for a second time this year. already. and a new cnn original series following the creation of one of the world's most popular social media platforms, the twitters. twitter breaking the bird premieres this sunday at 10 p.m. only on cnn. here is a preview. >> when people are building products, when people. >> are building. >> features, there's this. >> analogy that i. >> use. which is. >> an engineer. comes to you and they're like, i've made the perfect kitten. it doesn't need food, doesn't need water. it will never grow old. it will never die. it is the perfect kitten. when you look at the kitten, you're like. why can
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this kitten shoot bullets? and they're like, well, that's not. that's not what you're supposed to use the kitten for. i told you all the things the kitten was intended to be used for, and i'm like, yes. and someone, whether accidentally or on purpose, is going to shoot a bullet with this kitten. >> i just took a shower above the clouds. you know why?
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country. >> the united. states of scandal with jake tapper sunday at 9:00 on cnn. >> welcome back. >> have i got. >> news for you? new tomorrow on cnn. >> new this morning. here are the quotes no one is answering. i'm freaking out. those are the words coming from newly released text messages and also 911 calls in the case against bryan kohberger, the man accused of murdering four idaho college students. these new details are coming from the two surviving roommates from that horrific night. prosecutors are now asking the court to allow these messages to be used as evidence in court. kohberger is set to go to trial in august. this week, another twist his attorneys have asked for new dna evidence to be thrown out. cnn's nick casarez is here with much more on this. and this is all very important because this is what's going to be able to be seen in trial or not. >> oh, this is going to be front and center. and, you know, since
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november of 2022, we've known there were two surviving roommates, but we really didn't know what they said, what they knew, what they did. and now we've got a glimpse of that timeline is so important here. and everybody, let's start with 4 a.m. to 4:25 a.m. that's when law enforcement believes the murders occurred. 4 a.m. to 4:25 a.m. all right. first timeline. at 404. there was a white elantra that was driving in front of the house. it actually started about 330 in the morning going back and forth, but it was very apparent at 404. at 412, there was a doordash delivery. xana kernodle had ordered some food. she answered the door. she got her food. she went into her bedroom. it's believed she was very much awake eating her food. at 417, there was a security camera about 50ft away from the house that they all lived in, and that security camera had audio, so it picked up, first of all, a whimpering, a thud, and then a dog barking. and kaylee
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had a dog. then at 422 to 420. 422 to 424 there were texts back and forth with the surviving roommates that were alive. they were in their separate bedrooms on the first floor. no one is really answering. i'm really confused. xana was wearing black. i'm freaking out. it's like a ski mask almost. i'm not kidding. now, we did know before that one of the roommates said she opened her bedroom door, saw a man all in black with a mask covering his nose, bushy eyebrows, 510. not muscular, but a little athletic. that's probably what they're referring to right there. and then finally, at 10:45 a.m., they text kaylee and maddie. morgan, where are you? call us back. and finally, seven hours later, at 1158, almost noon, they call
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911. and they say that they have an unconscious person. it's xana kernodle. and that's when law enforcement got there. so it's you got to think about this because they were petrified. finally 911 was called. they were there the whole time they survived. they'll be on the stand. we'll hear the recordings. this will be so important to the trial. >> what they heard, what they recall. these messages that kind of track, that timeline and that track, this timeline. this is just all. i mean, but but first you have to have the judge say it's in. and so this is why this is so important that every step of the way is so critical leading up to this trial. let us see. it's great to see. eugene. thank you so much, john. >> all right. new this morning he went from the olympic slopes to one of the fbi's ten most wanted. ryan wedding, a former canadian olympic snowboarder, is accused of running a multinational cocaine ring and arranging multiple murders. there is a $10 million reward
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out for him. when he competed in the 2002 olympic games. this morning, two active duty u.s. soldiers and a former soldier are accused of selling military secrets to buyers in china. the indictment alleges one of them sold nearly two dozen classified hard drives, labeled either secret or top secret, along with military documents. the justice department says the two active duty soldiers served at joint base lewis-mcchord in washington state. this morning, a new ntsb report reveals that the black box on the jet that crashed into a philadelphia neighborhood. the black box was not recorded. officials now say it likely had not been working for years. the ntsb estimates it will take between 1 to 2 years for them to determine the likely cause of the crash that killed seven people. this morning, the faa is telling space x it must investigate why its spacecraft exploded during a test flight last night. it lost contact with ground control at minutes after lifting off. people saw debris falling from the skies. the faa had to issue a ground stop at
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airports in florida for a time. now, this is the second straight time this happened. another starship spacecraft exploded in january during a test. >> hi, you are my rock i. southwest land. my wings. my confidence. you are. your willingness. >> a brand new song released by dolly parton today, and it is a great one. dedicated to her husband of 60 years, carl dean, who passed away this week. the song is called if you hadn't been there. dolly parton says, quote, karl and i fell in love when i was 18 and he was 23. and like all great love stories, they never end. they live in memory and in song. and i dedicate this to him. only dolly parton could come out with such a great song so quickly. >> so much. and i wish her well. this is going to be hard for her. thank you john. all right.
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as president trump walks back tariffs on most products from mexico and canada again canada says retaliatory tariffs will stay in place until that pause is permanent. cnn's john king went to visit our northern neighbors as part of his all over the map series to hear what the canadians think about the president and his tariffs. >> reporter this. >> is american. steel in western canada for custom finishes. one belt is to burn a few notches and drill a few holes. another to weld some angled braces. soon back on a rail car and back across the border for an office project in alaska. it is a partnership that supports 100 jobs here at i industries in surrey, british columbia. this is just one piece of nearly $800 billion a year in trade between the united states and canada. now, though, a partnership in peril because of president
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trump's insistence on new tariffs. >> he wants to show that u.s. is strong. and because i'm bigger than you are, i can bully you around and this is how i'm going to do it. >> trump paused the tariffs thursday, just two days after imposing them. another about face. yes, walji prefers no tariffs, but he says weeks of threats and contradictions from trump make it impossible to plan and are already hurting both economies. >> even with the threat of tariffs, prices have gone through the roof and they've gone higher. so we're seeing right now when we're bidding a job today versus bidding it three months ago, our cost has gone up almost 15%. >> british columbia is a living postcard. scenic mountains and gorgeous waters. the importance of trade is everywhere you look. canadian lumber waiting at river's edge. rail cars to carry canadian crude oil crops and more. the bustling pacific rim port of vancouver. >> you watch. >> it for eight hours. >> you'll see on. >> average. >> we've. >> got ten ships arriving and ten ships leaving. we did about 160 million tons of cargo last
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year. 75% of that is those bulk commodities. but grain, coal, potash, sulfur and and other agricultural products outbound. >> peter zada is the port ceo. he says shippers who normally plan 6 or 9 months out are now taking things a few weeks at a time because trump is so unpredictable. and he says trump's threats and his tone leave canada no choice but to find new markets, new partners. >> it's been a wake up call, right? it's been a wake up call dependent. >> this rift goes beyond what canadians see as trump's bad math. they are furious at his bad manners, his constant insults, calling canada the 51st state and its prime minister. governor. >> we've been. >> in this together for a long time. >> we fought wars together. we went to afghanistan. we did all this stuff together. why? what are you doing here? >> daryl lamb is the brand manager at legacy liquors. yes. this, too, is a front in the new trade war. >> there's a yellow rose right there from texas. right there. so. >> is it popular? >> it is.
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>> and if this goes into effect, you can't sell this. >> it will be off the off the shelf. >> it's gone. tito's vodka too. also from texas. diagram of a trade war. the premier of british columbia says if trump imposes tariffs, he will ban sales of alcohol from states that trump won that also have a republican governor. >> we've gone through this before with the russian invasion of ukraine. we were asked to remove all russian products from our shelves. >> lamb says some customers rushed to stockpile american favorites, but others want all american products off the shelves. so mad at trump for what he's saying about canada that they're saying, get it out of. >> here 100%. absolutely. i'm just worried about this eternal relationship that we've had for 200 plus years, being soured for four. >> vikram vinayak is a short haul truck driver. carrying berries destined for the united states on this run. what are other loads that are pretty typical.? >> honestly. >> these auto parts and produce.
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sometimes we take frozen fish. >> how much of your work are products that you know are going to end up in the united states? >> more than 8,090% of our loads are going to us. >> as many as five runs a day, 40 to 50 hours a week. but tariffs will cut shipments to the united states and cut vinayak's hours. you have a wife and two daughters? >> yes. >> and so what does that mean about planning? thinking maybe we won't make a vacation or maybe we won't buy something. what is it? >> no, no, just planning is nothing. the main thing is how to get out of this situation by finding another job. >> does that make you mad? you might have to find another job. do you like this job? >> yeah. i love this job. >> one of many jobs now at risk because of a us-canada relationship. trump just shifted into reverse. john king, cnn, surrey, british columbia.
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>> just minutes from now, a check in on the health of the u.s. economy. the monthly jobs report about to be released. the first monthly jobs report of president trump's second administration. you see futures look ticking up right now. we're going to bring all of it to you. and for the first time, for the first time in the united states in more than a decade, south carolina is preparing to execute a death row inmate by firing squad and brand new body cam video, just in to cnn shows the incredible moments a police officer rescues a 12 year old boy who nearly drowned in a hotel pool. i'm kate bolduan with sara sidner and john berman. this is cnn news central right now, we're standing by for a jobs report brought to you this morning by the letter u. >> for uncertainty. uncertainty over what the numbers will show and uncertainty over what
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