tv DW News Deutsche Welle November 4, 2024 7:00pm-7:31pm CET
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airplane muscles are important for both candidates, especially when speeds like michigan to how we would expect the outcome national election to us presidential election, 2024 watts. the whole coverage on the this is the w is life invalid and the final death campaigning for coma harris and donald trump. i had of tuesdays the elections in the united states. mr. trump tapes of the stage in the swing states of north carolina with a final appeal for votes as the race for the white house goes down to the why. we also look at the controversial project, 2025 policy agenda, which is essential to many folks. his peers in these elections look at the playbook and the conservative passed a full view estimate lives hours. also on the program, the world appears at morton's us producer and some nice to quincy jones. he worked
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with some of the biggest styles and produce the world's best selling album. michael jackson's thriller the i'm so going to a welcome to the program with just the day until the us presidential election. polls indicate that the result is still too close to coal. couple of hours for the democrats and donald trump, for the republicans that making a final push across key battleground states. vice president power has made a closing pages, arriving in the spring states of michigan to spend monday in pennsylvania. where shall holding late nights and valley with celebrities, including oprah winfrey. donald trump is currently holding a campaign event in raleigh. the capital of the swing state of north carolina, polls show his chances honor about even with his opponent. as his rather, he missed a trump described, complet harris was incompetent to tomorrow. you have to stand up and tell tamala
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that you've had enough. you can take it, you just they're all screaming fire, excuse me. i mean, she's what a terrible job of what they have done to. i got you. and you're going to say that you're, you're going to say, you've done a terrible job. you're grossly incompetent. we're not going to take it into our come by law. yeah. fire. tens of millions of people have cost of the ballots, with several states already surpassing all of the voting records, but many more people across the country. i hope you've got bad folks in before tuesday's main event. on the eve of election day, millions of americans have already made the presidential pick. people in ohio queued for hours on sunday, determined to cost ballots before early voting closed. i mean,
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we're here cuz like it's really crucially important. like, yeah, so many rights are at stake right now. gay re submitting rates. everyone's rates, immigration, so it's a big deal. so i've been in line for about 2 and a half hours and i wanted to do early voting. realize when i got here that probably a lot of other people had the same idea as well. we validated, it sounds great. i feel gratified. i feel satisfied. and i'm probably about, you know, we, we added on voice more than $77000000.00 americans have cost yearly votes with so many ballots already in some official, st boots and states like georgia could be a ghost town on tuesday. georgia is one of 7 swing states likely to be crucial to the election along with michigan, nevada, north carolina, wisconsin, arizona. and what could be the closest contestable pennsylvania the poles there, but the race on the nice edge i hope that we're able to take you and have an honest,
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good election, a fair election. and i hope trump windsor, i think they really are learning a lot of the policies of hairs. and the more they learn, the more they're changing their vote. and there's a lot of independence that i've talked to that are leaning toward terrace. so i feel good. i do feel good about it. i don't want this extreme is right in the left side. i want people to be able to talk to one another again in a way that's respectful and, you know, people to get along again. and i think we're hitting this turning point where we can have that again. well, many of those has nervously anticipating election day when a may not be declared quickly. both camps have people on the ground monitoring the vote. security measures a being put in place in washington in case of any and raced. it could take days for
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a final results to be consumed. so what can american photos ending? date the world expect if donald trump becomes us president again, an ultra conservative think tank has drafted a detail set of policies known as project 20. 52025. that he hopes he will enact. mr. trump has tried to distance himself from the project, but the democratic candidate come to harris, hopes to tie him to it's more unpopular and provisions, you know, project 2025. which i mean can you believe they put that thing in writing dangerous? its its desperately and its diabolical democrats, drawing attention to what they say are extreme elements and the conservative heritage foundations policy playbooks. it's in nearly 1000 page wish list of what republicans want to see happen if they take control of the white house in january 25. the project is divided into 4 main pillars. given the president more power and
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installing loyal backers, defending americans borders and sovereignty, declaring the family as the focal point of american life, and more firmly, routing christian ideology in us society. under the plan, parents could be given greater control over schools and their children's education . and diversity programs for minorities, including blacks, and the l. g. b t q, community would be rolled back publicly. donald trump is distance himself from project 2025. he posted on social media. i have no idea who is behind it. i disagree with some of the things they're saying, and some of the things they're saying are absolutely ridiculous, and the business democrats and pushed back, tying trump to unpopular provisions like increased scrutiny of women's pregnancies . he has been pretty clear in his behavior and his deeds. he will ban
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abortion nationwide. he will restrict access to birth control, put idea of treatments at risk and 4 states to monitor women's pregnancy. and you don't have to take my word for it just google project 2025. read the plans for yourself. meanwhile, a group called america 1st policy institute as emerged as another source of administration plans. the a f, p. i's agenda overlap significantly with project 2025. but the group has kept a low profile and has avoided taking some of the more extreme positions on social issues that project 2025 takes. instead, it contains detail provisions on how to staff agencies and use executive power. so the administration can do what it wants to that may be on purpose. there are numerous people involved in a f t i who are also trump campaign and transition team insiders. their agenda is
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a west list. it's a program for action. let's look through this or is that under rudy levitz who is a professor of government at the boat and college and the state of maine. he studied the american political institutions with an emphasis on the model president save the executive branch and into branch relations. he seems like just put on a welcome suit d, w. d. you see anything sinister in these 2 groups compiling that wish list of actions for the president of the base report? well, it's not uncommon for think tanks and those associated with prior administration for with a particular political party to come up with a, you know, talking call them in dates for change or something, you know, sort of a telephone book size list of things that they would like to see and acted by a new administration. you know, those affiliated with both parties have done that. what's different about this particular compilation right, is that you do have this alliance of groups of people who have been affiliated with
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the 1st drop administration. and would very much like to see him expand his aggressiveness, with regards to policy and executive power in the 2nd. it's a very specific $900.00 page cost book. if you're looking to project 2025, the list of a point to use that's been compiled by other sympathetic groups also quite extensive. and so really it is a, maybe more than 4 prior presidents, a sort of ready off the shelf blueprint for enacting quite a number of controversial provisions. you know, maybe they can all be done on day one about. but in the early days of do administer ation. so when donald trump distances himself from these groups publicly do believe him to be honest, not really uh these are folks behind it who had been quite close or even worked in the 1st trop administration. stephen miller, for example, at the american 1st policy institute was a, a t lieutenant of mr. trump, in the white house, very involved immigration issues. a russ bought was the president spikes
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a director that's been talked about. and he's been talked about as someone having a role again, maybe is even the white house chief of staff and the 2nd administration. and so this is a, a closely collected group of conservative intellectuals who have been trying to push this program on really any president, listen, but mr. trump is more open to that. and these are folks, again who are likely to serve in the 2nd term. if there is one, was one of the more i touching points to these are just the basic notion of giving the president more power and storing, loyal back. cuz how does that square with the current constitutional checks and balances? could they be made under the current constitution? as well as the presidential power rest and part on the constitution itself and partly on the powers that have been delegated to the president by congress over time. part of what these folks have been looking at are ways that the
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president could use existing law to implemented rather different agenda than we've seen to date, for example, in immigration or environment or with regards to reproductive rights. looking back, for example, in immigration laws, but it didn't back to the 18th century that are just never been taken off. the books, in which, at least in prospect, could give the president authority to act in ways to deport. he's talking about millions of people who are in the united states. obviously there are logistical difficulties associated with that. but in terms of again, the power granted to the presidency. that's pretty extensive. a lot of what has held prior presidents back isn't so much the law but norms, for example, after the watergate scandal and 19 seventies, the department of justice has effectively run independently in some areas, especially with regards to criminal prosecution from the white house. there are rules about context, the presence not supposed to lobby for
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a particular person to be investigated criminally. we saw erosion of that norm in the 1st drop administration, but there are items, you know, in project 2025. the call for that to be removed entirely for the justice department to be sort of a subordinate wing of the white house. and that could have some rather damaging implications. we see 2 efforts to wipe out a civil servants and replace them with folks who would be vetted and approved by the white house in a lot of the policy making areas. this would have the effective, again, using existing law to implement proposals that are, are new and in some cases pretty extreme. okay? so all of this, they fucking into some of what you say this sounds like. so it's, these are, is a wish list of the current laws and the current state of the constitution. what is different about that is just the applications. it's just as you say, that they the know they,
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the thinking beyond thinkable within the current framework. so well, both of us in this do us citizens. what, let me just uh, by all means, if i could answer that question maybe more carefully than i may ask before i would say, you know, a lot of this is legal. people haven't pushed this envelope this far with regards to presidential authority. but you may remember the supreme court over the summer rules that precedents can't to be prosecuted criminally for official acts. now the definition of what is official and not is not entirely clear in that ruling, but it seems pretty certain that a present has been empowered, right? who wants to push the envelope of the law has been empowered by this supreme court decision. and so i don't think we should expect timidity when it comes to trying to use a bright colors. the i'm, i'm way of both as might be in all these. do us citizens want a super president? what this essentially sounds like a king as well. they say they don't,
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and of course, it will depend very much on their decisions about hundreds of members of congress as well as about the their choice for the president seems pretty likely that the vice president harris will win a majority of the popular vote. and if that number is over 50 percent of the total of, you know, under the american system with the electoral college of, you know, mr. trump could still return to the white house if his votes come from the right places. geographically, you know, folks are remain skeptical, i think about presidential power. but what we've seen recently is polarization. that is associated with my president, what i'll call being able to be a strong leader of by using these executive authorities. but if a president of the other party does it, then it's tyranny. we don't, i think have a lot of neutral sort of assessment of present actual power that's outside of that
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pullers ation. and that's worry. and because i think in the past we did have a broader public and congressional checks against presidential overreach, broadly potential testing times a had a fascinating analysis and we thank you for it, professor andrew, to leverage from bowden comments. thank you so much. thanks for having me. this is a stain last severe weather as far as the cancellation of flights to and from boss alone as to mentioned, right, puzzles the province of catalonia, about 50 flights due to take off from the, from outside the airport to being affected by so i think with some incoming flights diversity road in bales troubles those have been disrupted spain's old many grappling with the aftermath of last week's extreme flooding in the east of the country where at least 217 people were killed mostly in defense. you know, sometimes a rescue is still searching for fontes and 5 houses and cause 7500 troops have been deployed to how it effected as well. just that stephen bug an inbox alone,
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and it told me more about the situation in most a loaner. well its uh its stop writing uh for the time being uh no rain is full cost until tomorrow morning. about the airport as you said, is still barely functioning because of a torrential rain that we have this morning. and one of the main access roads to the city in the south of the city is underwater and also on usable uh, the vin, no trans today. uh, people we go to, we go to the looked at about 1030 this morning, telling people to uh, work from home, if possible, to avoid uh, journeys, and i many schools with those. but at the moment, uh, things uh, its gloomy but its not writing and uh, things i think may get back to normal by tomorrow. but as we seem with us, whether i can change very suddenly and violently. so no one's taking anything for
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grabs is okay. looking back at last week said disastrous living in valencia. people that are angry about b authorizes inadequate response. now the politicians seem to be blaming each other the stairs, somebody that was disaster heaped upon disaster. i think the topic were generally agreed that the response has been inadequate and incompetent and the person who had responsibility but call us muscle. and the president of valencia has come out today and said it's not his fault. first, he blamed the central spanish government for not calling an emergency, when in fact, it was up to him to do that. and then he blamed the water authorities for playing down of the danger, which they've denied. and they say that it isn't. all they do is supply information and then so the government to uh,
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to issue the alert which as you know was no issues until 12 hours after the weather . people had. ready that this was coming. so unfortunately, to, unfortunately, to seize this, you know, this, this does us as part of the best in spanish people in the, we've seen the 10s of thousands of volunteers going to help. and this pulled out the was with this as a scribbling politicians just kind of so i'm what's going on and balance here at the moment. so what sort of shape i well is still lacking. essential services, like motor food is, is gas or suppliers erratic? so a lot of people still without electricity, we still don't really have a precise figure on how many people are missing because of a general lack of coordination and the clear office beginning. but the move can say that clear up is going to take a very long time and requires is not something of all the tools can do. it requires
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heavy machinery to, to move a cause to the bridges. we will be seeing this going on for several weeks. and months. okay, thank steven stanley, steven bergen in boss savannah. this is a quick look now as of all stories that making the news around world is riley strikes, co 12 people in cars or on monday. let's go to the medics in the palestinian cabinetry. residents work to become a bodies from the wreckage after the attack on the town of bet, last year in gauze as north view and published any. and the refugee agency says each mail has scaled back the number of a trucks allowed into gaza. those radio authorities, the 9th, is your training and officials say several people have been injured in a russian ass drive on a supermarket in hockey tax stuff and other things to assist me with assist you 5 2nd largest overnight officials thank glide, palm hit, the supermarket,
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which is next to high rise apartment buildings. so it'd be as transport and infrastructure administered as promised to step down if the 14 people were killed on the roof of a train station collapse last week. protest us by government corruptions the deadly incident and demanded accountability and demonstrations of the weekend. a speculation is mounting the government governments on the verge of collapse. the 3 way coalition government made up of the center left social democrats, the dreams and the business from the f. d. p is often referred to as a traffic light coalition. after the contents of the 3 member potters, i've been in power since 2021. but now the, i think the p finance minister goes down live now is triggered afresh. dispute that observer say is backing his coalition partners into a corner. crisis talks at the german chancellor on sunday. are these the final hours of all our shots, his government? the social democrat chancellor and his green and liberal coalition partners are at
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all. so if a how to revive gemini, struggling economy last week proposal from the f d. p. finance minister, we're leached. he wants reductions to pensions, tax cuts for ohio knows the weakening of climate goals. the dfcs thing is, it is this current situation with different concept come small talks by the chance of the pay by mr. have a proposal. it's from my side. i can promise, but citizens that we will resolve the situation quickly canal but given his wish list is an absolute no goal for his coalition partners. some to you, this is a pretext for him to prove the plug altogether. no, all eyes are on a meeting of the government on wednesday. originally, it is important to clarify with that we all still have enough stamina to continue on this challenging and strenuous pos to give them it's vital gain combines up. if the answer is no, it could spell the end of the traffic light, government invalid and potentially even snap collections.
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and finally, us music produces so like the quincy jones has died age 90. 1, queen still live jones as career began in chicago and spend more than 7 decades. he worked with styles including frank sinatra, vinyl richie and stevie wonder. and he produced michael jackson's thriller album. it also produced the old scar recording the charge me back was coming, releasing offers the ones that as and beto is a joe list and pop culture commentator and joins us from washington. welcome to the company about list of, of musical royalty that quincy jones worked with this almost endless, uncovered styles from jazz through swing and of course pump. how did you become so accomplished and so many musical styles this? i think the cool thing about quincy jones is actually kept an open mind. you know,
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he started as an arranger and a conductor. jazz orchestra is most people in those spaces are not open to pop music and definitely not hip hop. and i think he just wasn't over these a i think was a true using glover. and that's why he was such an amazing musician. and so he worked with everyone from, you know, frank sinatra and leslie gore and michael jackson and also your cool d. and the guys came in and rabbits in the 90s, and so she was truly special. that way. i'm over that change because the ballistic includes people like who go way back like a ray charles and that, and i had a fitzgerald or right. right. uh yes, he met really read charles of high school actually when he was 14 and racial 16. and actually he said they re, charles was an early influence. and so i'm, you know, it's really special for students who have so touch so many john or is and seen so many people he played on like all of us for us, the wise, 6 1st 60 appearances. and of course those work with michael jackson,
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which is just truly classic and really i think that's what most people know him for . but he really has a 70 year career that was started long before michael jackson came along. and i last say after, yeah, i've been on to sound tracks of all of them. 50 films and tv programs nominated for and one oscars emmys. tony's and crime is. i'm produced films, tell us more about his impact on pop culture and beyond. it. like i mentioned, you know, a few span so many genres i think is work with michael jackson. again. i have to say would be probably use his crowd, who was thriller is the best selling album of all time. but those and work on the dad, you know, off the wall outlet was a classics, and he's, he's 128 grand he's and you'll recently was the last, the 2nd most of worry artist. so i only be honestly and your soul to have more gram . he's and i think you, like i said, it's the music. that's the movies he's. he's produced the same songs for, you know,
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countless shows. he started a magazine fine magazine was started by quincy jones, you know, and his, the austin powers things on is actually the, somebody he made in the sixty's. and so it's just, it's hard to say truly, you can calculate all that because he jones is and as a movie producer, he basically brought oprah winfrey and would be go over to prominence with the color purple you, i can go on and on and on. he was truly, truly special. and so tell us about the some of the reactions from the entertainment industry to this news. so everyone is really sad and i on the ranch as a media in your area. i'm from show li ralph to, you know, now roger is even the michael jackson. this thing has put out a statement on the wall reeling from the off in the law. so just as a musical giant and just one of the best or ever do it. ok, thank you so much for joining us. that are on site runs. i assigned by the thank
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you so much. is your mind about top story this our the us vice president of homeland harris has made that closing page to us, the voters. it's around the, in the swing state of michigan, the day before the residential connections are probably going to fold it. don't jump, spinning, north carolina, which is the kinds of us have been talking to swing states. c. s key to the elections. and in spain, severe weather has forced the cancellation of flights to box alone asked dimensional right and publish the province of pennsylvania about 50 flights to, to take off from enterprise that bullets have been grounded because of flooding expands. already grappling with the aftermath of severe flooding in the east of the country. lots to me you know, is getting the deputy news on the go. just download the app from google plan from the apps store that gives you access to the latest news from around the world, as well as push notifications for any ranking of
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across africa, fear and uncertainty. and nigeria? why i keep it in my secret abductions in kenya is trying to silence us. the son of sites law says $7.00 to $10.00 in 30 minutes on d w. the hey, you're welcome to d w to our channel. what's hand pick? trey news on this stuff, and in this story it's still just a click away. the, what's the discovery fascinating chases to great
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idea. computing countries. stats the disease, thought lice. get in the tensions are rising in the red sea. humans whose the militias are attacking shipping, paralyzing a t global trade route. and in early september 2024. their attacks on oil tankers threatened to cause an environmental disaster. the united states has responded with air strikes on who's the positions. and the militant group is mobilizing for what it described as a new holy war and official what we wanted to
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