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tv   CNN This Morning Weekend  CNN  April 5, 2025 4:00am-5:00am PDT

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you. see if sparks are right for you at roku. sparks. >> this is cnn, the world's news network. >> glad you stuck around. good morning. welcome to cnn. this morning. it is saturday, april 5th. here's what's happening
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this morning. tornado watches are in effect across parts of the south right now, with storms stretching from the gulf coast to the canadian border. and meteorologists say that some areas will experience generational flooding through the weekend. china is hitting back at the u.s. after markets closed down friday over fears about tariffs and inflation. the foreign ministry there posted this message to president trump. the market has spoken and president trump just threw tiktok a lifeline, a short one. for now, millions of u.s. customers will still have access to that app for another 75 days. but what happens after that? we'll have to see. and yes, it's april, but march madness still in full swing. the final four teams in men's college basketball will be down to two by the end of the day, and coy wire has more on how the coaches are getting their teams ready for that big championship game. we're starting this hour with that extreme weather moving through parts of the country. this morning, communities hit with severe storms all through
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the week are now bracing for more rain and that chance for generational flooding that i mentioned. at least eight people were killed across tennessee and missouri, indiana and kentucky this week. one of them was a little boy swept away by floodwaters while on his way to a school bus stop in kentucky. right now, the mississippi valley is under the highest possible risk for flooding rain, and that's almost unheard of outside of hurricane season. the national weather service has identified at least 31 tornadoes since wednesday. one woman in indiana was trapped in a car as the storm rolled overhead. she survived, but one of her dogs trapped in her home died when it collapsed. >> my window was busted out, and that's all i remember. the debris coming everywhere and hitting me, and i ducked my head. and then he got me out of my vehicle because i couldn't open my door. he was trapped underneath. and i think it crushed him. but he was alive when they found him. and my sister in law and brother took him to the vet, and he was there
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was nothing they really could do. >> all right, let's take a look at that storm system again. right now. texas, arkansas, parts of the midwest getting slammed. arkansas is where we find cnn's michael yoshida. it looks like the rain has picked up since we spoke with you last. what are you seeing and feeling there? >> hey, good to be back with you, victor. you right? the rain has started to pick back up again. you talk about that generational flooding. we have historic water levels here in hardy, arkansas. a short time ago, i spoke with the mayor. he says he's never really seen levels quite this high. we at last check were around 23. i think point six feet for the water level of the spring river, which is about more than a football's length away from where i'm standing. but still, you can see just how much water has started to fill the main street area of this town, the mayor saying at least 50% of the residents here are going to be impacted by this flooding. we know throughout the night there
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have already been water rescues, the fire department, the police department, the sheriff's office all teaming up. as part of this effort. the sheriff himself, i had a chance to speak with him a short time ago, says he actually had to do one of those rescues, had to go rescue some dogs that had been left behind by homeowners. three of them he had to pile into his sheriff's vehicle to get them out and away from all of this high water, the water continuing to rise. and when we talk about this water level, to put it in a historic context again, at last check the water gauge level was around 23.6. flood stage here is ten feet. so you go back to 2011. they saw levels around 21ft. 2008 we saw levels around 22ft and it's hard to see. we probably can't see it, but if we look off into the distance, it looks like some sort of container actually is just kind of floating along. again, this water level is so high, the water out of the banks of the river to a level at this point where even homes, we're told,
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that are on stilts near the river, they are being impacted by this. again, a major concern throughout the last few days following that other severe weather leading up to this weekend about these rain conditions, the mayor saying, thankfully, a lot of people heeded those warnings. they either evacuated, grabbed sandbags, but obviously the water here continuing to impact and something they're going to be watching throughout the rest of the day and obviously through the next few days, watching as this weather system continues to move through. back to you. >> all right. michael yoshida out there in the rain covering it for us. thank you. new. this morning, senate gop members took a key step forward in advancing president donald trump's multitrillion dollar agenda overnight. but half a dozen house gop lawmakers and senior aides told cnn that they're a little skeptical that the senate plan will survive the house. the senate's vote-a-rama ended early this morning. democrats hammered back by forcing votes and offering amendments. a lot of them failed, including democratic minority leader chuck
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schumer's amendment that targeted president trump's new tariffs. >> president trump's tariff tax is one of the dumbest things he's ever done as president, and that's saying something. markets are plummeting. >> gop leaders are scrambling to pass the full package before recess in august. and cnn's eva mckend up with us live on a saturday morning, mostly because this went into the morning hours. what are the main takeaways folks need to know about this vote-a-rama it did. >> victor, listen now, the interparty war over how to pay for this among republicans begins. but listen, democrats are running out of messaging tools, mechanisms to push back against the trump agenda. and what we saw in the vote-a-rama last night is them really have a platform to at least air some of their grievances. among the amendments we saw from democrats included efforts to support ukraine combat doge, or the department of government efficiency and save social
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security, as they insisted republicans are pushing for tax cuts for the wealthiest americans, and argued spending cuts would slash programs like medicaid. but now this budget blueprint that includes trillions, trillions of dollars in permanent tax breaks and new money for national security will have to survive the much more conservative gop led house. and it's important to note the blueprint offers little detail about what trump's bill will ultimately look like. we don't know what programs will be funded, what programs will be cut, or how the money for the border will be spent. so this is an opportunity for democrats to negotiate in the house to make this effort more bipartisan. victor. >> august sounds like a long time away from now, but with legislation of this size, it certainly is not. eva mckend good to have you. thank you. let's turn to the economy now. it was a rough end to the week on wall street. you saw it. the dow dropped more than 2200 points friday, closed out two days of steep losses. tech heavy nasdaq entered a bear market,
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closed nearly 6% lower. that's a more than 20% drop from the nasdaq's record high in december. the plunge came after president trump announced tariffs against 185 countries. got even worse after china retaliated and announced 34% tariffs on all imported u.s. goods. businesses and americans are digesting president trump's tariff announcement. so let's break down the impacts with greta pace. she's former general counsel for the office of the u.s. trade representative's. greta, good to have you. we heard from the president via social media yesterday. and just minutes before the market closed, he posted on one of his accounts in all caps. only the weak will fail. the fail is relative. but what do you make of the framework, the framing that the president is putting against
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around these tariffs? >> well, thank you for having me. so, you know, the president is following through on something he's been talking about since the campaign and since coming into office that he wants to reset trade relationships, to put in tariffs that, in his view, are reciprocal that are counterbalancing actions that other countries have taken against the united states and their treatment of the united states. and in his statements, when he announced these tariffs and since really signaled that he, he means it and he's digging in and he is not going to react, at least in the short term, to the movements of the market. >> well, we are seeing some reaction overseas. cambodia has announced that they're going to immediately work to lower tariffs on u.s. imports there. let's take cambodia as an example here. i think 49% was the the tariff that the president placed on imports into the u.s. from that country. but
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last year, the u.s. imported nearly 40 times the value of goods from cambodia than the goods that cambodia imported or sent to the u.s. so the trade deficit was the starting point here, 321 million exports from cambodia 12.7 billion in imports from cambodia. that is not going to narrow substantially because of their population, their economy. how do you get to closing that gap or eliminating the tariffs when you're dealing with a country of that, that size economically. >> that's a great question. and the way that the president and the administration has talked about this is mirroring the trade barriers that other countries impose on the united states. but as you mentioned, in fact, that's not how they've calculated this tariff. it's based on the magnitude of the trade deficit relative to exports to the united states. so
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it raises a great question for an economy like cambodia. they are very export reliant. they manufacture mostly low cost goods, textiles, other products to the united states. and they don't purchase much of what the united states sells which are aircraft. other high technology products agricultural products. they probably import some, but there really isn't a room to to balance that trade relationship. they can as they have proposed, to reduce trade barriers, but only so much. right. it's not going to equalize our trade with a country like cambodia. >> yeah. so those non-trade barriers, which the commerce secretary, the treasury secretary, the president himself have highlighted as where they say that these countries are, quote, taking advantage of the united states. give us a timeline. you've you've negotiated these trade agreements and disagreements as
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they are. it can take years. can it not? >> absolutely. i mean, some of these barriers are quite complex there in other countries, legislation and regulations. you can't just snap your fingers and make those, structures go away. and, and so and layered on top of that, you have negotiations with potentially over 100 countries simultaneously who are all coming to the administration saying, what can we do to remove these tariffs? and you just don't have the capacity to talk to all of those countries at once, much less even a handful who have quite complex and entrenched trade barriers that the united states faces? >> yeah, some of these negotiations and impacts are at this point, at 30,000ft. there is also the loophole for people who are buying their, you know, their short sets and their son dresses on shi yi or housewares
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on teemu. these companies in china and they're coming here. the president has closed a loophole, and people are going to have to start to spend more as they just go straight to these websites to buy these items. right. >> absolutely. that's correct. so in u.s. law, there is an exception for tariffs, but also the formality is the kind of filing and sort of red tape that goes along with importation for those small packages at $800 or less. and with respect to china one of the orders of the president signed this week was to remove that treatment. and so that means you're not only paying the tariffs and needing to calculate what are the tariffs on those products and the shippers needing to do that. for customers, but also bringing those products in with all of the documentation and information about what's in the packages in order to comply with the normal importation rules.
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>> a lot changing and we'll see if april 10th is implementation day for some of these higher tariffs. we'll see what happens then. thank you. president trump gives tiktok more time to find a buyer before being banned in the u.s. team coverage from the u.s. and china. we have that for you straight ahead. plus, it's a high stakes court clash in the making. the trump administration appeals a federal judge's order to bring a maryland father who was mistakenly deported to el salvador back to the u.s. plus, a department of defense inspector general opens an investigation into the signal group chat scandal. what we know about it a little later this morning. >> she's a woman who prosecutors say pretended. >> to be a wealthy german heiress. >> it doesn't sound like you really regret what you did. it wasn't a victimless crime, right? i mean, you took
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it? >> yeah, victor, that really is the question here. can trump get this deal back. >> on track? >> this delay was sort of surprising because president trump and vice president vance had repeatedly said that they expected a deal to be in place by today. but now trump is saying that more time is needed to make a deal. and what we're hearing from a source familiar with these conversations is that there was actually a deal in place that was set for trump to certify it this week. that deal would have given majority control of tiktok u.s. to american investors, leaving bytedance, tiktok's parent company, with just a 20% stake, which is a major requirement of this law, but that the deal went off the rails when trump announced these tariffs on china and bytedance representatives essentially came to the white house and said, china is not going to approve of this deal. while these tariffs are in place. so the question is, can trump get china to agree to a sale of tiktok as this trade war is going on? and for me, the other big question is did trump have the authority to delay this
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ban for a second time? a lot of the legal experts i'm talking with say that no, because the law allowed for a single 90 day extension of the ban. if the president could prove to congress that a deal was making significant progress, i should say, and this is now the second time we're seeing a delay. so i'm wondering if we're going to start hearing from members of congress who passed this law on a bipartisan basis on national security grounds, whether they will start to speak up about why a deal hasn't happened yet. victor. >> and so, claire, do we know who would have been involved in that deal that was scuttled to to buy tiktok? >> yeah. what we're hearing is that most likely oracle, which is a tiktok tech partner in the u.s. right now, this is the company that manages tiktok servers. it would have been oracle, along with another a number of u.s. investors, other private equity and venture capital firms all investing in a new company called tiktok america, and that they would have all had the majority stake
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in the u.s. operations of tiktok, leaving bytedance as just a minority investor. so, you know, it is interesting to see that bytedance had signed off on this. we're told u.s. investors were ready to go. the trump administration was ready to go. and now this tariff war has really gotten in the way. >> clare duffy with us. thanks so much. for more on the reaction from china, let's bring in cnn correspondent mark stuart in beijing. mark, what is china saying about this? have they signed off on a deal? >> well, victor, clearly the focus right now in beijing is on this whole trade and tariff back and forth. so for the moment, we're not getting any real insight from the chinese government. but just by nature, this is one of the most contentious issues in this us-china relationship, in the sense that china, on this particular matter, has accused the u.s. of acting like a bully in the past. we are getting some response from bytedance, which
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is based in here in asia, the parent company of tiktok. the response, though very generic, claire alluded to it earlier. just saying that there is not any agreement. an agreement has not been reached and that there are still significant differences between the two. so a very generic statement there. there's also, though, some conversation on chinese social media. including on the social media platform weibo, which is basically china's version of x. it's not the top trending topic by any means, but it's a point of conversation. there is a hashtag, a very long hashtag that says trump gives tiktok another 75 day grace period. we heard from one user who said don't give it a grace period. just ban it. every so-called grace period is really just like a bargaining chip to force china into tariff concessions and the like. so that's some of the
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conversation that's taking place. but really, at the end of the day, the chinese government is going to have a very big stake in all of it. it is going to have to give its approval, because the last thing it ever wants is to appear that it's being told by the united states what it cannot do, what it can do with one of its platforms, especially in the american market. and it would not want to do anything that would give american investors any insight into tiktok's very valuable algorithm, which is seen as the secret sauce. and that algorithm within itself is what has made tiktok victor just so valuable. >> yeah, we'll see if there's any deal that satisfies that. mark stuart, thanks so much. bad news for gamers. preorders for nintendo's highly anticipated switch gaming system have been delayed. how the president's tariffs are impacting that company. all right. down to the final four teams in the ncaa
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men's basketball championship tournament. coming up, we'll hear from the four coaches looking to lead their teams to a big win. >> this is the one who helps everyone stay safe. an unsung hero in a building full of everyday heroes is just how he likes it. the industrial grade products you need. call, click or stop by granger for the ones who get it done. >> you did it. you took. >> an idea on a. >> napkin, built a successful business and made it look easy. but at u.s. bank, we remember what went into getting here. the hard work, self-doubt, tough decisions from all those extra hours to finally enjoying the rewards. our wealth management team is always here to work with you and every generation to come, because there's nothing
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>> another case closed. >> i'm just gonna close this case. that's it for the two of us. >> this is big. this connects everything. >> true detective night country back to back episodes fridays at 9:00 on tnt. >> closed captioning brought to you by book.com. >> if you. >> or a loved one have mesothelioma, we'll send you a free book to answer questions you may have. call now and we'll come to you. >> 821 4000. >> in a narrow 5 to 4 vote, the supreme court sided with president trump on friday to temporarily freeze roughly $65 million in teacher training grants. it's the administration's first win in the supreme court of the second term. now, the funds were supposed to have helped several states address teacher shortages. now, the states could still ultimately win in the case. the court pointed out that they could get funding back in
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later lawsuits. the trump administration has until monday night to bring back. a man mistakenly deported to el salvador. a federal judge handed down that order after the trump administration admitted that kilmar abrego garcia was deported as a result of an administrative error. the judge called the deportation illegal. we'll hear from a abrego garcia wife next hour on, first of all, los angeles county has reached an agreement in a $4 billion lawsuit over sexual abuse claims at juvenile facilities. officials say there were more than 7000 allegations of abuse claims going back to 1959. the deal still needs to get approved by the los angeles county board of supervisors now. if it is approved, the settlement will far surpass a more than $2 billion lawsuit settled in 2022 involving sexual abuse claims within the boy scouts of america. nintendo has now postponed its new switch to gaming console preorders in the u.s. the company says the latest
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tariffs are responsible for that. nintendo revealed that the pricing and release date for the device on tuesday. they released all that information just a day before president trump introduced the series of tariffs on foreign goods, including ones from asia, where nintendo's tech supply chains are based. the company has not given a new date for when the preorders in the u.s. will begin. the acting pentagon inspector general has now launched a review of pete hegseth use of the signal. in a group chat discussing war plans. that chat group was used to discuss military strikes in yemen with other high ranking officials. cnn's natasha bertrand has the details on what this review could mean for the secretary. natasha. >> good morning. >> victor. >> the acting inspector. general at the pentagon. he has launched a review of the use of signal by secretary of defense pete hegseth to discuss an impending military operation against the houthis. and in. >> a letter to the.
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>> secretary of defense issued this week, the acting inspector general said that he is going to be looking at whether any rules governing classification or records retention laws were violated because, of course, secretary of defense hegseth, according to these texts that were published by the atlantic last week, he did disclose very sensitive information related to the exact timing of these military strikes against the houthis, as well as the kinds of aircraft that would be used in these attacks and other weapon systems. now, while secretary of defense hegseth has said previously that that information was not classified. cnn has been told by multiple sources that it was. and that disclosing it prior to the operation actually taking place. hegseth could have put service members who were conducting that operation at risk. and so while this inspector general review is not any kind of legal review, it is going to provide some measure of transparency once it is over about what exactly transpired here, because it is the first independent review we have seen
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of this entire signal gate as it's come to be known. fiasco. of course, we know the national security council had said previously that they were going to review this, but the white house said later that they consider the case to be closed. so this inspector general review is going to be carried out here at the pentagon. they are going to be conducting interviews and requesting materials from the secretary of defense and his aides. it's also going to be carried out at u.s. central command headquarters in tampa, because this was a central command operation against the houthis in yemen. and so it may take some time for us to get any kind of answers or any kind of disclosures about what this review produces. but it is a step towards getting some information about why signal was used, how widespread the use of signal is across the department of defense, and whether any information was improperly handled or disclosed here. victor. >> all right. natasha bertrand. thank you. automakers are already preparing for the fallout from president trump's
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tariffs. coming up, we speak with the mayor in michigan who is concerned about how the economic fallout could impact his community. >> feeling anxious? >> i don't know what's going on. don't worry. >> put your feet up. >> don't panic. >> we can help. >> you cope. it's called. >> disassociation. >> it's all on fire. >> did you not find that comforting? >> have i got news for you? tonight at 9:00 on cnn? >> boring, sir. >> you're on mute. >> yeah. >> are you for imprint? >> certain. >> certainty matters. experience. certainty. with. for imprint. high quality promotional products. expert service and on time delivery. visit for imprint.com. >> for imprint. >> for certain. >> home aglow. just cleaned my entire house for $19. seriously? $19. they showed up right on time. did my dishes, my laundry. they even cleaned my windows. you just pick a date, pick a
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of symptoms getting. >> worse. >> and my cidp can be treated with once weekly injections that take about 30 to 90s. >> do not use titulo if you have a serious allergy to any of its ingredients. serious allergic reactions like trouble breathing and decrease in blood pressure, leading to fainting and allergic reactions such as rashes, swelling under the skin, shortness of breath, and hives have been reported. the most common side effects are respiratory and urinary tract infections, headache, and injection site reactions. it may increase the risk of infusion related reactions and infection. tell your doctor if you have a history of infections or symptoms of an infection. >> i'm hitting fairways with the fellas. >> i'm hitting the road with my number one. look at you. >> that's how we live. >> vividly with. >> my visit live vividly.com or talk to your neurologist. >> the war on government a fareed zakaria special sunday at 8:00 on cnn. >> 25% auto tariffs are now in effect on all cars shipped to the u.s. from other countries. let's put that into some
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context and perspective. if you buy an imported car with a value of $40,000, it will come with a $10,000 added tax on it, and you'll likely bear at least part of that cost. add on those auto parts imports that will be rolled out over the next month, and every car will get more expensive. that news put automakers and community leaders on edge, especially in michigan, where several u.s. automakers are located. lansing mayor andy schor joins us now. mr. mayor, thank you for being with me. you've got two gm assembly and stamping facilities in your city. 7,000,000ft÷ of workspace there. the president says that these tariffs are going to force more companies to build similar facilities and factories to to manufacture parts assembled here. big businesses will thrive. what do you say about that promise? >> well, i'm more concerned about. >> the right now.
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>> you know what he's talking about. could be years in advance. what i'm talking about is tariffs with canada are going to increase the price of cars. you just said it. we've got a back and forth for auto parts. we make cars in lansing. we make gm cars. so if you drive a traverse, you drive a camaro, you're buying a lansing made car. but if the price of that car goes up, we're going to make less cars. we're going to you're going to sell less cars. we're going to make less cars. and my concern is we're going to see less shifts. we're going to see potentially plant closures. all of these things are going to hugely affect not just the the uaw employees at these gm plants, but also our economy here in lansing and in michigan and throughout the u.s. and we've already seen it. we've we've saw stellantis lay off 900 employees, which affects two michigan cities and midwest states. so these are my concerns. the immediate, you know, i want people to buy american cars just like everybody else. and they should because we make the best cars here in america. but with the supply chain, with canada, you know, you talked about auto parts. these prices go up.
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people are going to buy less cars. we're going to be tremendously impacted. >> there are some supporters of the president who say, respectfully, i'm sure, mr. mayor, you are wrong. and one of them was on stage with the president on wednesday when he announced these new tariffs specifically on the auto tariffs are now in place. this is brian pennebaker. he's a few counties away in macomb. and i want you to listen to what he said and then respond. >> i have watched my. >> entire life, i have watched. >> plant after plant after plant in detroit and in the metro detroit area. close. there are now plants sitting idle. there are now plants that are underutilized. and donald trump's policies are going to bring product back into those underutilized plants. there's going to be new investment. there's going to be new plants built. we support donald trump's policies on tariffs 100%. so mr. president, we
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can't thank you enough. and in six months or a year, we're going to begin to see the benefits. >> so what do you tell brian panabaker. >> well, you know i respectfully disagree. we certainly have seen issues with plants in lansing. you know, 30 years ago there was a threat of a plant closure. and at the end, we added a plant. we've seen the camaro, which was made in canada onshore back into lansing. this give and take is always happening, but we've always had fair trade with canada. you haven't needed a 10 or 25% tariff in order to have this conversation. we have the best auto workers in the world, and because of that, we expect that plants are going to be here. stamping plants and assembly plants are going to be here. we have a new $2.7 billion battery plant that is is just being finished being constructed. we don't need these tariffs in order to to make sure that everyone knows we make the best cars right here in lansing and in michigan and in america. but we do need to have the auto
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parts and the back and forth with canada without adding the costs. i certainly want to see everybody come and work here and and do the jobs here. but if the auto parts rely on the global supply chain and that is going to be more expensive than the costs will increase and we'll see layoffs, you know, if in two, three, four years we have a new billion dollar plant, that's great. but in the meantime, we're going to be in trouble and we're going to see layoffs, and it's going to be our uaw employees. and that's a huge concern for me. in addition to everything it's going to do to the economy, both here in lansing and everywhere else. and it's not just autos. you know, we also have shipments of vegetables and steel and wood and other things where we go back and forth with canada. we're building all over the place in lansing. we're growing our city 1 to $2 billion. and if the costs increase that, that that could hamper, all of our construction for all the things that we're doing here. >> yeah. is this i mean, we've discussed this in a michigan canada framework for most of
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this conversation. is that an autos you talked about the agriculture there in ingham county. you're surrounded by farmland in outside of the capital. take me to that perspective. that angle of this conversation. >> well, there's there's a back and forth, you know, we we sell we we have things grown here, but we also have things grown in canada. the i think there are the most greenhouses anywhere are in essex county, which is right outside of windsor, right across the border from detroit. you know, they sell avocados and other things. you know, in michigan we sell cherries. we do cherries better than anybody else up in the traverse city area. so if we export cherries and sell cherries in canada and they sell avocados, it's a back and forth and and adding prices to that means that we're not going to be able to have the peppers and the avocados and other things that are made across the bridge in canada, and they're going to have to pay more for things like cherries. it's a back and forth, and it's a it's a fair trade. and when you add a lot of cost to
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that, you know, the groceries are going to go up and the agriculture is going to go up. and that's a huge concern for us. you know, this isn't this isn't a, you know, trade with china. this is trade with canada. and that's new. that's not something that was talked about in the campaign in terms of increasing costs due to our our supply chain and back and forth trade with our neighbors to the north. >> lansing, michigan mayor andy schor, thanks for the conversation. enjoy the saturday. >> thank you. >> new episode of united states of scandal with jake tapper follows the story of anna delvey. now she managed to convince new york's elite of her fictitious backstory as a german heiress. in a few short years, she was able to con banks and hotels and businesses. some friends with her falsified story. here's a look. >> she was able to walk into a hotel without a credit card, convince them that she would pay them in the future, and she was granted access to a hotel room. she was able to walk into a bank
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and say, i promise you, i have money. it's not here, but it's on this bank document and i'll give it to you down the road. just give me a loan first. and they did. >> before her. >> grift was. >> up, anna had conned banks, hustled. >> lawyers, and stiffed restaurants. >> and even. >> friends to the tune of more. >> than. >> $275,000. >> i think there's. >> something about the absolutely bonkers. delusional self-confidence that it requires to pull off something like this. people wouldn't want to admit it, but they begrudgingly respect it. >> watch a new episode of united states of scandal with jake tapper, airs tomorrow at 9 p.m. eastern and pacific on cnn. first major forecast of the 2025 atlantic hurricane season is out, and forecasters are predicting a very busy season. just as noah grapples with major cuts to its staff.
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include a bottle of eugenics thermo ecs, our most powerful fat incinerator ever. to help you get back into shape fast. >> i'm pete. muntean at reagan national airport. this is cnn. >> we're about, what, eight weeks away now from the start of the atlantic hurricane season. and according to a new outlook, it could be a very busy one. meteorologist allison chinchar breaks down the numbers for us. >> colorado state. >> university's first official forecast. >> for the atlantic. >> hurricane season. >> is now out, and they are calling. >> for a. >> total of 17 named storms, nine of which are expected to become hurricanes and four to become major hurricanes, meaning a category three, four, or even five storm. now, compare this to an average year when you would typically have 14 named storms, seven of which would become hurricanes, three becoming a major hurricane. now, one of the main components to these
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forecasts is whether or not we are going to be an el nino or la nina. conditions this year is going to be a bit interesting, because most of the forecasts are actually calling for neutral conditions. so what a lot of forecasters are actually having to look at is sea surface temperatures elsewhere. take for example, the atlantic, the caribbean or even the gulf of mexico, where right now those sea surface temperatures are well above average. if it continues to stay that way, we all know warm water is fuel for these types of storms and would likely enhance any tropical development. now, when we take a look at the names on the list for this year, you may notice one new one and that is dexter. this replaces hurricane dorian from back in 2019. we are also looking at some other names that were retired from last year. the world meteorological organization this week releasing the names that they will be retiring. and that includes beryl, helene and milton from last year's list. now, the new names that will be replaced several years from now will become brianna, holly and
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mcgill. >> the matchup is set for the women's college basketball national title. south carolina will face uconn tomorrow. the gamecocks are looking to repeat as national champions after they defeated texas 74 to 57, in friday's final four. south carolina guard te-hina paopao scored a team high 14 points in that win. the huskies secured their return to the title after they dominated number one ranked ucla 85 to 51. this match will give the college game's most high profile uconn player, paige bueckers. bueckers, another chance at the championship. one last shot before she is expected to move to the wnba. 68 teams down to the men's final four. the conclusion of march madness is set to tip off in san antonio tonight. cnn's coy wire goes one on one, with the four head coaches set to lead their teams on college basketball's biggest
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stage. e all four teams in the final four been number one seeds. in 2008. april 5th and seventh, and it was in the exact same place right here in san antonio. i caught up with the final four coaches just a bit ago, who've led their teams on this whirlwind of a season and asked them, what's one key to being a great leader? >> trust in your players. trust in your staff, everybody making sacrifices, you know, for the greater good. understand that when we as a team are successful, you as an individual will benefit far more than if you as an individual successful. the team fails. all these kids cared about all year long is winning. >> i try to lead. >> you know, from. >> kind of the players perspective. >> and even though. >> obviously i'm the head coach. >> i want them to feel like. >> i'm. in it with them. and so whether it's practice, you know, or some of our workouts. >> and when we're watching. >> film, we always. >> want our staff and team to feel connected. and. >> you know, one of our. >> kind of traditions is.
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>> shooting half court. >> shots the day before the game. and that was an example. >> of that today. >> respect the people you're leading up and make sure they understand that we're we're we're doing this together. and somewhere along the way, i've learned the importance of being a servant leader, and not a boss. i like working with people and helping them become better at whatever they're doing, and i think that should always be a joint effort. i've learned that. >> in. order to ask anybody. >> to do anything, you better be willing to do it yourself. and that's something. >> i've always. >> tried to take pride in. you know, i've tried. >> to use the fact that. >> i'm younger to get out there with our guys when possible. >> but the. >> end of the. >> day, i don't. >> think you can ask them to do anything you're not willing to do yourself. >> they're out there dunking on him. oh, i'm not, i'm not. i get. >> i can shoot on him, but but not dunk on him. i'm not sure about defense either, but i'll give it i'll give that effort. >> it's about to be on saturday night. we have auburn and florida tipping things off. then we have duke and houston duking it out for a chance at the
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national championship game. for all the live updates and analysis, you can check out our march madness live story at cnn.com. >> first of all, it's coming up at the top of the hour. we'll hear from a small business owner who came to this country from colombia. he's worried that president trump's trade war is putting his american dream at risk. plus, you know, there's not a lot that can stop the u.s. navy, but its future leaders are being blocked from reading books on race and discrimination, diversity, even testimony from victims of hate crimes. we just got a list of books pulled from the naval academy library, and the pentagon's first chief dei officer, also a navy vet, also a current member of congress, is here to react to it. and a wise man once suggested that we take our shirt off and twist it around our heads, spin it like a helicopter. my conversation with hip hop artist petey pablo about how his iconic track could be an official state song. those
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conversations and more coming up on. first of all, after a quick break. >> for you. this one's for who? us, us us. >> who am. >> i. >> petey? pop? first of all, there is with. >> anderson cooper. >> listen, wherever you get your podcasts. >> if you're living with hiv, imagine being good to go without daily hiv pills. good to go off the grid, good to go nonstop 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 can get every other month. it's two injections from a health care provider as few as six times a year. don't take cabenuva if allergic to its ingredients or taking certain medicines that may interact. serious side effects include allergic reactions or rash, post injection reactions, liver problems, and depression. if these occur, get medical help right away. tell your doctor about your medicines or supplements, medical conditions, liver or kidney problems, mental
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