tv CBS This Morning CBS October 27, 2016 7:00am-9:00am MDT
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captioning funded by cbs good morning. it is thursday, october 27th, 2016. welcome to "cbs this morning.? donald trump goes to battle with a retired army colonel over u.s. military ra michelle obama as leaked e-mails show a link between her family's foundation and bill clinton's speaking fees. we travel to russia, searching for hackers targeting the u.s. and other countries. see the spear fishing technique they use to attack the democratic national committee. >> a delta connection pilot in south dakota is accused of trying to fly drunk. passengers react after he was arrested on his way to the
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we begin this morning with a look at today's "eye opener." your world in 90 seconds. we cannot stop for a minute. no complacency! nobody -- nobody flagging. >> clinton and trump battle for swing states. >> what do you say to supporters who think you shouldn't be taking time off the campaign trail? >> one off to cut a ribbon to one of the great hotels in the world? i think i'm entitled to it. she has one stop. >> ash carter secretary of ns thousands of california national guard members to repay an enlistment bonuses. >> i think we ought to have oversight hearings on. >> in italy, centuries old buildings crumbling after the quake hit, people running into the streets. >> a pilot is under arrest for allegedly operating a aircraft while intoxicated.
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panicicing. >> i'm trying to escape and you're trying to record this? >> a massive system bringing snow and rain. >> it's all tied up. the cubs, they are right back in this world series. >> the reaction from chicago. they got to be thrilled. >> all that. >> donald trump's star was attacked on the hollywood walk of fame. a protester smashed it with a pick ax. >> actually, it was a gavel, said paul ryan! >> and all that matters. >> congratulations, newt, last night. that was an amazing interview. >> you are fascinated with sex and you don't care about public policy. >> first off, everybody is more fascinated with sex than public policy. >> hillary clinton's 69th birthday. >> hillary's birthday party is like any other birthday party. but when everybody says, speak, speak, she chars 65,000.
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to wileaks. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by toyota. let's go places! ? welcome to "cbs this morning." the election is a dozen days away. the latest poll shows a narrowly lead for hillary clinton. the national survey shows the democratic nominee up by three, 44% to 41% over donald trump when third-party candidates are included. >> now trump is working to cut that margin he traveled from his new hotel near the white house to the battleground state of north carolina yesterday where he blasted a former army colonel. major garrett is covering the trump campaign. >> reporter: good morning. throughout a day of hotel fan fare and swing state campaigning, donald trump insisted he is winning the race for the white house but as sometimes happened, trump veered off script attacking hillary clinton's health and he really got into it with a coalition's
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implying he knew more about military maneuvers than anyone. >> you knock the -- you say it. what is the word? [ bleep ] [ bleep ]. >> and you knock the hell out of them. >> reporter: donald trump criticized the coalition's iraqi-led assault on mosul the last isis stronghold in iraq. >> boy, oh, boy. what a bunch of amateurs. >> reporter: retired army war college dean jeff showed trump doesn't know a damn thing about military strategy. >> some clown from some institute came out today, why is donald trump saying that about mosul? hey, folks. i will put my thought process against these people any time. >> reporter: in an interview, trump's know-it-all streak came through. >> why can't they win first and talk later? why do they have to say three months before the attack we are going in? so you can tell your military
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>> reporter: donald trump defended his decision to leave the campaign trail to puff up his new washington hotel. spinning the criticism to attack hillary clinton's stamina. >> she is home all the time. she takes many days off. she reads her teleprompter. gets in a plane, goes home and starts sleeping for three days. she's a very low-energy person. >> reporter: trump also fired back at clinton for this questionable claim. >> he relied workers to make his project cheaper. >> i didn't use one. for two reasons. number one, i didn't want to. and, number two, i'm running for president! why would i -- would i do that? >> reporter: trump says he used e-verify to insure he didn't hire any undocumented workers on the d.c. hotel project. but despite trump's bragging and fair bragging but the project came in on time and under budget, competitors say trump overpaid to renovate the old
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the district of columbia have been slashed by nearly half to attract customers. cbs news battleground tracker indicates that if this election were held today, hillary clinton would get 288 electoral votes and 18 more than she needs to become president of the united states. her campaign is under new pressure this morning because of apparent leaked e-mails from wikileaks and raising more questions about payments to the clinton foundation. a former aide today. nancy cordes is in tampa following the clinton campaign. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. we have known about former president bill clinton's high price speeches for years, but what this memo reveals is just how deliberately his top aide worked to convince top donors to the foundation to hire him to give speeches as well and even
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no complacency here. nobody -- nobody flagging. we have got to get everybody out to vote. >> reporter: clinton will campaign for the first time today with first lady michelle obama who has turned out to be one of her most powerful advocates. >> decent men do not demean women. >> reporter: they are hitting the trail as a hacked 12-page memo posted by wikileaks reveals how former clinton white house aide doug band worked , obtain inkind services for the family for hospitality and hotel and the like. it laid out how his teneo helped donors who were simultaneously giving to the clinton foundation and one to barclays 700,000.
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than 50 million dollars for the former president. it was in response to a audit of the foundation by concerns of chelsea clinton that band and teneo was hustling business. in a separate e-mail band complained he was held to conflict of interest policies that the former president did not have to adhere to writing oddly wjc does not have to sign such a document even though he is personally paid by three gifts from them, some that are at home, et cetera.he clinton foundation because of the good work that it does around the world. these hacked wikileaks e-mails also show that clinton campaign aides have long been concerned about how this web of donors and
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thanks. john heilemann is managing editor of bloomberg politics and ko host of the circus on showtime, a division of cbs. >> good morning, guys! >> good morning, guy. >> we want to get to the ratings in a moment -- i mean, the polls in a moment. >> our ratings are very good. >> paging dr. freud! >> they are tremendous. we are the fastest growing morning show. they are tremendous. huge! >> we will get to polls in a moment. is all of this linked from wikileaks about the clintons and money and speeches have an impact? >> look. if you looked at just the polling, which as you said we get to in a moment, the answer to that question is no in the sense that i think a lot of voters all of this stuff feels like inside baseball to them and not stuff that affects the real odds of real people. >> and feels like something they already knew? >> i think it feels it is confirming suspicions that people had that these operations that the clinton foundation was at the nexus of charitable donations, personal money making
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it's all like a little cd. certainly this doug band e-mail lays out in detail the extent to which and aggressiveness with which they brought to bear on the comingling of the doing of good works and the enrichment of the former president. >> is this race getting tighter and why? >> i don't think the race is getting apressurably tighter. she has a much better lead in the national level than the battleground states and no, sir surprising they are called battleground states for a reason, they are tight. in most of the country all of the people hear the national news how terrible donald trump is. donald trump goes to those battleground states and has advertising on the air and gets better coverage in places where he goes. so the race is a little closer but as i say to a boring degree on this show, he has never been ahead in the race and not ahead in the race now. and if you look at the battleground tracking poll, she is over 270 by a healthy amount right now and that still has states like florida and ohio and
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all states she could win and even if he does win them he is still short. >> we have nearly 13 million people have already cast their ballots. >> right. >> 40% of the will cast their battles by november 8. florida and north carolina where traditionally republicans do well in the absentee vote but with early voting the democrats have pulled even, sometimes slightly ahead in north li about the lex if the lex were held today and people say, well, it's not held today, still time between now and lex day. flip it around the other way and the election has been being held for some period of time. and this is the place where when we talk about why is the ground game matter? it matters because the clinton superiority on the ground is giving her terms in early banking of those votes. >> do you see anything donald trump can do in the closing days
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candidates advice. it has to be a big change for this race to get off its current course. >> john heilemann, always good to see you and thank you for bringing your enthusiasm. >> you are delightful. reliably delightful. >> did you know about our ratings? >> i -- i -- charlie has occasionally mentioned them to me. >> thank you, john. cbs news will before you the results of the election as they come in and coverage begins tuesday, november 8th, 7:00 p.m. eastern and 6:00 central and watch all day cbsn, our streaming network. the white house is expected to highlight what it calls the success of the affordable care act. but concerns over the rising premiums are overshadowing the reforms. chip reid is at the white house as republicans try to capitalize on the increasing cost. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the white house is vigorously defending the president's health care law but those rising premiums are giving new
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house. >> we are going to repeal it and replace it. the disaster known as obamacare. >> donald trump isn't shy about using obamacare's problems to his advantage. >> repealing obamacare and stopping hillary clinton's health care takeover is one of the most important reasons we must win. >> reporter: it's giving the republican presidential candidate some rare comments >> this law is collapsing under its own weight. >> reporter: speaker of the house paul ryan calls obamacare a failure. >> it's devastating arizona with premiums set to double. >> reporter: and republican senators, including john mccain. >> i approve this message. >> reporter: and ron johnson are trying to use rising health care costs. >> we need ron johnson to stop it. >> reporter: to help them win reelection. lower than expected enrollment
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25%. though about 85% of consumers will get a subsidy. >> we do believe there are changes that need to occur. >> reporter: in washington on wednesday, sylvia matthews said it is due to insurance companies offering rates too low because of a data from a previously nonexistent marketplace. >> any rate increase, gosh, that sound bad but we need to keep focusing on what consumers are >> reporter: but the words are a little comfort to jackie maloney, a widow whose insurance company sent a letter saying it's leaving the obamacare marketplace and her cost will be much higher. >> i'm a widow with two kids. it makes it very difficult. >> reporter: the fourth annual enrollment season of obamacare begins tuesday, november 1st. the white house is working very hard to get people to sign up. especially young healthy people
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to do so. >> thanks, chip. the pentagon is halting efforts to collect millions in reenlistment bonuses from california national guard troops. defense secretary ash carter spoke yesterday about the claw-backs that have generated a backlash. >> i thwarted the suspension of all efforts to collect reimbursement from effective california guard members. and that is suspension will continue until i'm satisfied that our process is working. >> thousands of soldiers who served in iraq and afghanistan were later deemed ineligible for the payments. the payouts were $15,000 or more. the money came as cash bonuses and student loan forgiveness. bipartisan members of congress have vowed to find a permanent fix. >> was this a story we first reported on monday and look where it's turned up. >> it just had every indication that nobody would stand for this. >> yes. u.s. officials say the fight against isis and syria must be
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accelerating preparations to hit the group's de facto capital of raqqa. signs of new plots and air strikes blamed on russian or syrian war planes yesterday killed nearly two dozen children in northern syria. video shos explosions and plumes of smoke in a rebel-held area. the bombs ripped into a school reportedly killing at least 35 people. the u.n. agency says the victims include 22 children and six teachers. >> the video is very hard to watch. workers expect damage fr central italy last night measuring 5.5 and 6.1 in magnitude. they forced hundreds from their homes in august and damaged some historic churches. one man died of a heart attack that officials believe may be . kris van cleave is at dulles
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washington. >> reporter: good morning. this pilot was actually removed from the cockpit by police. passengers waiting to board the delta connection flight learned of the delay saying it was due to a crew member issue. well, it was later they learned one of their pilots may not have been fit to fly. this skywest operated delta flight landed late on wednesday. this passenger explains why. replacement pilot because our pilot was drunk. >> the one thing a pilot should not do is that. >> reporter: shortly after 8:00 a.m. wednesday, tsa officers noticed the pilot, 38-year-old russell duszak smelled of alcohol and he got a beth lieser test and indicating a blood alcohol level above for pilots
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checks and balances other than tsa officers smelling it on their breath. >> he was arrested and released on bond and put on administrative leave. it was tweeted the system worked the way it is designed to ensure passengers safety was not compromised. two pilots were stopped earlier this year before flying passengers from scotland to the u.s. one pleaded no contest to charges. he was drunk as he prepared to fly from det t the faa says the number of so-called pilot alcohol violations is low. ten last year and 111 the past decade but passengers aboard this flight were concerned. >> i'll be more anxious when i get on flights were the pilot or co-pilot, where they have been the night before. >> reporter: this pilot has been removed from flight status.
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misdemeanor charges that can carry up to a year in jail and $2,000 fine and his initial court appearance is set for november 11th. heavy smoke triggered an emergency evacuation from train in boston commuters kicked out windows yesterday to escape overheat motor head caught fire and five passengers were treated for smoke inhalation. >> a big cat performance turns scary for a trainer and the audience. that is ahead. first, it's time to check
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the news is back in the morning right here on "cbs this morning." announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by kohl's. take an extra 20% off plus take an extra $10 off your purchase of $50 or more plus get kohl's cash plus yes 2 you members earn triple points. now that's the good stuff. kohl's listerine? kills 99% of bad breath germs for a 100% fresh mouth. feeling 100% means you feel bold enough to... ...assist a magician... ...or dance. listerine?. you wanna see something intense? pantene expert gives you the most beautiful hair ever, with our strongest pro-v formula ever. strong is beautiful. i've been taking probiotics gx from nature's bounty to help with the occasional unwanted gas and bloating. wherever i get stuck today, my "future self" will thank me. thank you. thank you! how do i get stuck in an air duct? nearly 50 years of experience has taught us:
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zostavax is a vaccine used to prevent shingles in adults fifty years of age and older. zostavax does not protect everyone and cannot be used to treat shingles or the nerve pain that may follow it. you should not get zostavax if you are allergic to gelatin or neomycin, have a weakened immune system or take high doses of steroids are pregnant or plan to become pregnant. the most common side effects include redness, pain, itching, swelling, hard lump warmth or bruising at the injection site and headache. it's important to talk to your doctor since zostavax contains a weakened chickenpox virus. remember one in three people get shingles in their lifetime, will it be you? talk you to your doctor or pharmacist about me, single shot zostavax. you've got a shot against shingles. (vo) stank face. single shot zostavax. an expression of disgust caused by inadequate litter tidy cats is the cure. with new guaranteed tidylock protection, you won't have to face one more stank face. tidy cats.
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west 48th avenue. this happened around 8:00 last night in wheat ridge. the rider died. you can see from the video the bike is just mangled. wadsworth reopened shortly after 11:00. no word on what caused the crash. we have a traffic alert. joel hillan is here to talk more about that. >> they're zooming in the camera, this car along the side not in good shape. this is one of we have between denver and colorado springs along i-25. this is the southbound direction. delays in the northbound direction. they're able to get one lane open past toma. denver itself, accident westbound direction of i-76 at federal. another i-70 in brighton boulevard. pair of accidents westbound direction of i-70 at i-270. northbound i-225 backing up because they can't get onto the ramp to get westbound along i-
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,, ,, the time now, 7:27 on this thursday morning. a few clouds overhead making for a spectacular sunrise to the east. temperatures are in the 40s, even 50s around town this morning. plan on 40s at the bus stop. it is a bit chilly, so the kids will need at least a light jacket. by later on, they won't need one at all. none of us will. 81 later today. 82 tomorrow.
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? ? snowe gentlemen. you are under no obligation to agree to this fight but please do because i already made this promotional video. >> i'd like to take him behind the gym! >> i'd love that. mr. tough guy. >> coming soon to cbs! it's the rumble in the trumple. las vegas. the matchup you've been dying to see. the gop nominee versus the person you wish was the democratic nominee, biden/trump. only cbs! your destination for watching old people do things.
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>> don't poo-poo old people. >> very clever. >> there was some popcorn and say, let's go, old people! welcome back to "cbs this morning.? coming up in this half hour, on the trail of russian hackers blamed for stealing democratic national committee e-mails, charlie d'agata goes to moscow to meet another victim. why the man says the russian secret service has special access to launch cyber attacks. >> used car dealer is selling vehicles under takata airbag recalls. ahead and only on "cbs this morning," why a cbs news investigation has one lawmakers calling for sales of recalled cars to be halted. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. the "new york post" reports on a trainer attack by a tiger during a show for children and happened tuesday in pensacola, florida. the tiger clawed the trainer's leg and she was knocked to the ground.
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the cage and hit the tiger until it let go. the woman suffered claw cuts and minor surgery for a possible infection. >> nice husband there. he still has a wife. could have gone another way. "the washington post" reports that president of the philippines rodrigo duterte said in japan yesterday it could happen the next two years. us o leaning toward china. the white house has not received any formal communication from the philippines. >> a patient zero was long to have believed starting the aids epidemic in this country. blood arrived from haiti in 1971 before spreading to san francisco about a decade earlier than when patient zero, a flight attendant, supposedly, started the outbreak.
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competitor back on the market in the first half of next year. epipens were recalled. a news price has not been set. a two-pack of mylan's epipen now wholesales about $600. the company had been sharply criticized for price creases. >> apple's air pods are delayed indefinitely. they announced they would be sent out this month. they were introduced last month when apple revealed its new iphones have no headphone jacks. >> russian hackers are blamed for breaking into the democratic national committee and the clinton campaign chairman's community. a cyberteam known as fancy bear has also gone after targets in europe and russia. charlie d'agata followed the hacking trail through prague to
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blamed russian separatist ukraine for the passenger plane shot down that it came under attack itself from russian hackers. in prague we met one of the men behind those damaging reports. >> you get phishing e-mails and you click them. they steal your information. same stuff is used against the democratic national committee. >> reporter: toler showed us the still getting and they looked like the real deal. >> it doesn't say super bad russian -- right? you have no idea what is behind it. >> reporter: toler didn't take the bait but, instead, sent the suspect e-mails to u.s. cybersecurity company threat connect. investigators there found that the russian hacking group fancy bear had used the same sphere phishing technique against
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belli bellingcat and john podesta and clinton campaign chairman and back to the e-mail service headquartered in moscow. u.s. investigators across the board all agree that the hacks originated from russia. what is less clear is whether the order for the series of attacks came from the highest level. but a few embarrassing e-mails is nothing compared to the cyber attacks released on rud shortstop land. >> >> reporter: you got phone calls? >> yes. >> reporter: and death threats? >> yes. >> reporter: as bellingcat's russian contributor, he has reason to worry. after his reports exposed high level government deception, hackers hijacked his online accounts and posting personal photographs. a copy of his passport. even his home address and phone number. they intercepted his cell phone
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codes too. >> it was russian state sponsored attack. >> reporter: no doubt? >> no doubt. >> reporter: who would have these sort of capabilities? >> russians service some kind of back door for every mobile or internet provider. it's russian law to install such -- >> reporter: it's russian law? >> yes. >> reporter: and when you accuse russian government for hacking you. >> but i'm very worried about life so far. >> reporter: you can't exactly turn to the police for help. for "cbs this morning," charlie d'agata, moscow. >> you know, the u.s. has said it's going to respond and real worry about some kind of escalating cyberhacking and cyber attacks. >> i talked to companies, this is their top priority to try to
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which they believe are coming from the russians. >> it's scary when you hear the highest levels. what does that mean? it's coming from the highest levels of the russian government. >> they say they would not necessarily be doing this unless they had a reason. >> very scary stuff. hundreds of patients at an iowa hospital are learning they may have received water downed prescription painkillers. officials say a technician stole more than 730 patients may have been given a weak solution until the full painkiller. some government nothing but salt water. the hospital says the employee no longer works there. the dea is leading this investigation. lawmakers are trying to take action to stop the sale of recalled used vehicles. ahead and only on "cbs this morning," the effort to prevent dealerships from selling cars that could be dangerous. we invite you to subscribe
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and medications you take. using invokana? with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. it's time to turn things around. lower your blood sugar with invokana?. imagine loving your numbers. there's only one invokana?. ask your doctor about it by name. donald trump and congressman coffman would punish women. and coffman tried to redefine rape to mean only forcible rape. in coffman's bill, victims who were drugged,
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coffman and trump are too dangerous for colorado. dccc is responsible for the content of this advertising. ? toyota faces more fallout this morning from potentially deadly air bags. the automaker has called 6 defective takata airbag inflators and brings the total number of recalled vehicles to more than 23 million. a california woman died last month because of the faulty inflators. she is one of at least 11 victims in the united states. anna werner shows us how one dealership owner is taking an unusual step he says to try to save lives. >> reporter: good morning. used car dealers can sell vehicles with open safety recalls legally even though many consumers may be unaware of the
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toyota dealer earl stewart saw one of our earlier reports and decided to take matters into his own hands and now he is suing another dealer. he says it's all part of his attempts to get sales of cars with dangerous recalls stopped. we first interviewed toyota dealer earl stewart back in june when his dealership still sold vehicles, clearly marked with recalled takata airbags. is this how you mark them? takata recall? >> yes. r put to him later that same day made him reconsider. >> how are you going to feel if one does explode in a car that somebody bought here from you even with disclosure and they are severely injured or killed? >> how would i feel? i would feel absolutely terrible. >> reporter: soon after our visit, he decided to stop selling cars with those recalled airbags entirely. >> i didn't even realize at the time, i guess i didn't realize the impact until your interview and it was just a kind of a weakening for me.
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e i can't deal with that. >> reporter: but stewart says just one dealer stopping sales doesn't protect consumers. so he is now going after his competitors, suing one of them, arrigo under florida's deacceptive and unfair trading act and saying they are aren't tell people about the recall and misrepresenting the cars recalled for takata status. so another dealer in your market might say here is earl stewart. now he has decided not to and he is going to turn around and sue us for what he used to do himself? >> exactly, exactly. that's what they are going to say and all i'm saying is i wasn't right before when i realized the impact and the danger of what i was doing. i took action. >> reporter: our "cbs this morning" investigation earlier this year, found sales of used cars with safety recalls are
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told about recalls or given wrong information. >> any recalls pertaining to this vehicle? >> none. >> reporter: those sales are legal but democratic senator richard blumenthal of connecticut says they shouldn't be. you saw our coverage. were you surprised what the dealerships told us? >> i was astonished and appalled by the kind of deception and misleading pitches made. >> reporter: and, to you, it was clearly deceptive? not just misunderstood or a lack of knowledge? >> anybody knowing that car was under recall and making that kind of pitch has to be held accountable. >> reporter: blumenthal has proposed legislation but faces opposition from dealer groups. the national automobile dealers association told cbs news in a statement, the proposed law would lower consumers trade-in
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closer to getting 100% of recalled cars repaired. stewart expects his lawsuit will make him a pariah among his fellow dealers but says. >> it's so black and white in my mind and i couldn't understand how somebody doesn't get it. how can you allow somebody to sell a product that could kill or injure you? >> the owner of arrego enterprises said he was not violating the law but said he had not reviewed the lawsuit yet and will not give further comments h stewart is seeking damages as part of his lawsuit for loss of business and said it's hard to determine how much he has lost because he has gained customers by taking a stand on these issues. so he is not exactly sure but he says his primary reason for suing is not the money any way. it's to get the sales of the cars stopped. >> when you know better, you do better is what i always used to hear. but you know it's interesting he is suing for something he used
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>> don't you applaud him? >> very much so. interesting to see how it turns out. >> yes. >> thank you, anna. ahead what happened at a breakfast. you're sitting there eating your eggs and a deer dashes through the dining room in indiana? what do you do? first, it's time to check your local weather. announcer: this portion of "cbs this morning" sponsored by
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pression or suicidal thoughts, or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. side effects may include diarrhea, nausea, upper respiratory tract infection, and headache. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take, and if you're pregnant or planning to be. ask your dermatologist about otezla today. otezla. show more of you. video shows a commotion during breakfast when a deer charged through an indiana stra restaurant. the annual knocked down the tables and sent the deer flying through the restaurant. one woman almost collided with the deer. it hit a counter and it ran through the dining room and jumped out the window. the cameras captured the startled reaction. you know what? guys, i think the deer was
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? ? with ingredients like roasted hazelnuts and cocoa, nutella adds a smile to any morning. nutella - spread the happy! mike coffman, endorsed by the denver post. he's "a consistent warrior" who "took action against his party's presidential nominee," donald trump, and has "urged republicans to stop stalling on immigration reform." mike coffman. "reliable." a "leader." unlike morgan carroll, who the post calls "disingenuous" and "partisan." "if we're ever to see gridlock reduced in congress, we need more representatives like coffman." mike coffman.
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an, and i approve this message. i'm anne-marie green with a look beyond this morning's headlines. f0 good morning, everyone. it's 7:56. i'm broncos linebacker demarcus ware has his bling back. robbers broke into his home and took his ring, but officers nabed them. they broke into ware's apartment during monday's game. ware is thanking everyone saying, don't mess with broncos country.
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thing. it's about you going through my stuff. you've been in my house, and that's just the main thing, so it don't feel like home anymore. i'm glad i wasn't in there, i would have sacked him. >> multiple tips helped police make an arrest. there is a search for the driver who hit a cyclist and took off in boulder. it happened yesterday, or tuesday in a king soopers parking lot on table mesa drive. the cyclist bike. the vehicle involved is described as a silver dodge or plymouth minivan. it could have a broken passenger's side window and damage to the passenger side door. the driver described as a white man between 60 to 65 years old and apparently he has gray hair and a full white beard.
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? ? it is thursday, october 27th, 2016. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? more real news ahead, including the early voters who have already chosen a candidate. our cbs news election director looks at the trends from two battleground states. first, here's a look at today's "eye opener" at 8:00. donald trump insisted he is winning the race for the white house. >> it reveals how deliberately his top aide worked to convince top donors to hire him. >> all this from wikileaks about the clintons having an impact? >> the answer to that question is no in the sense that i think for a lot of voters, all of the stuff feels like inside baseball
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>> white house is defending the president's health care law but those rising premiums are giving new ammunition to republicans. >> workers are inspecting damage from two strong earthquakes in central italy last night. >> they learned of the delay saying it was due to a crewmember issue. it was later they learned one of their pilots may not have been fit to fly. >> good to have re >> our ratings are very good. >> paging dr. freud. >> they are tremendous. we are the fastest growing morning show. they are tremendous. >> happy birthday to hillary clinton who turned 69 today. she made a wish and then deleted the candles! ? i'm charlie rose with gayle king and norah o'donnell. with 12 days to go until
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people have already voted. donald trump holds three rallies today in ohio after visiting north carolina yesterday. >> and that is where hillary clinton will campaign today with first lady michelle obama for the first time. this will be the latest in a series of visits by the candidates to the battleground states. cbs news elections director anthony selvanto is at the table with the scoop. you looked at the early data coming in from the battleground states of florida and north carolina. what are you seeing? >> right. so many people vote early. more than half of the electorate is voting early in florida and people dig into the numbers and campaigns use them for spin. we don't know how people voted but we can look at party registration and in florida things are fairly even. republicans with just a little bit of an edge over democrats. that is registered voters, not necessarily how they voted. then you look at north carolina and the democrats, registered democrats have an edge there. more registered democrats have turned out so far to vote than republicans.
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>> are more people voting early this time than ever before? are you seeing that? >> yeah. what you're going to see is people, compared to 2012, have decided to go for what we call convenience voting and it is that. when the campaigns talk about how they are doing, remember, it's not just straight comparison to 2012 because as more people choose to vote early, now you've got more people already in the bank than you did back in 2012. >> the trump campaign has made the case that this election could attract voters who have never voted or have not voted in a long time. any evidence of that? >> not really. in fact, when you look at the vote history of the people who have turned in their ballots earlier and voted early you see most of them have voted before. in fact, particularly among republicans, 8, 9, 10 have voted in the past so no evidence that is showing up just yet. >> are we looking more women voters early? >> we are.
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than men. on balance you might say that is good for the clinton campaign but hold on a second. if you look at the voter file and see who they are, you actually see that they are older women and that is part of the women's vote less toward hillary clinton so it's not exactly clear that that is all good for hillary clinton. >> can you sort out why the poll numbers are all over the place? in some place she is leading by double digits and other places it's a statistical tie? p pollsters disagree. i think there is a lot of disagreement but look for polls that have a rather consistent partisan distribution, rather consistent balance of democrats and republicans. and if you see them that bounce all over the place, that is probably a place to be skeptical. >> the associated press did an
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they pointed out that after trailing in mail-in ballots, the absentee ballots, that democrats have surged ahead of republicans in north carolina. in fact, they say the democrats lead in ballots 47% to 29%. what does that suggest? >> yeah. that jives with what i'm seeing is well but here is the thing. that is, again, that is party registration. in a place like north carolina, you could have people, you know, this charlie, you could have people who registered as democrats a long, long time ago back when it was a solidly blue democratic state and they haven't voted democrat in years. >> exa. >> right. because you can vote for whoever you want on election day like a closed primary. >> exactly. >> did you know that, charlie? >> you have a turn in north carolina because of the people moving from the high tech income group. >> exactly. >> anthony, thank you. wikileaks has released more than 30,000 e-mails allegedly stolen from hillary clinton's campaign chairman. the clinton campaign will not confirm they are authentic.
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clinton's personal income. the 12-page memo is from doug band who was a top aide to the former president at the time. he shows how band's fund-raising efforts for the clinton foundation sometimes led to large speaking fees and other paid work for bill clinton. >> at one point, band refers to the foundation as, quote. band wrote the memo to lawyers reviewing his links to the foundation after chelsea clinton expressed concerns that band and his fellow associates were hustling business for their company. they say we are still not confirming the authenticity of the e-mails. new poll shows the country is more divided now than it used to be. 58% feel that way according to a
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trump spoke at yesterday about divisions in america. >> we need to be lifting each other up. listening to each other. respecting each other. not sowing seeds of hatred and bigotry. and i think one of my biggest jobs after this election will be bringing our country together and i'm going to need your help. >> i'm going to fight to bring us together as one great nation. we are a divided nation right now. just imagine what our country could accomplish if we started working together as one people under one god saluting one american flag. >> both candidates and their supporters took vote. >> cbs news contributor and republican strategist frank luntz is here. >> good morning. >> is there an opportunity to work together? >> how? how are you supposed to work together when already republicans in the house are preparing investigations on
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how are you supposed to work together when the entire campaign has been about e-mails and foundations and women and awful language? our health care system is coming apart. people are going to pay up to 30% more for their premiums. i got thrown off and i've never seen a doctor in 20 years and i lost my health care plan because of the affordable health care act. >> you haven't seen a doctor in 20 years? >> literally. >> frank, wow! why? >> it's because what are they going to tell me that i don't already know? >> a lot. l 20 years? >> we are going to have to have a conversation with you off line. that is very bad. >> maybe that is why the insurance is suffering. this is high-risk! >> and prevention. >> i was the cheapest person usaa ever had and i don't read my mail when it comes and i was without health care for two months before i realized this had happened. >> frank, we have issues to discuss with you. >> i want to be serious. >> get to the -- >> go ahead. >> donald trump, last saturday, introduces a contract with the
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this spot and complained that everything was sound bites and for the first time he actually outlined exactly what he was going to do on the first day in the first hundred days and nobody talked about it because he made the comment about suing the women who had challenged him. this campaign is insane and it is driving voters to the brink of absolutely giving up on the political process. >> you advise a lot of republicans, including the house republican conference. >> i used to. i used to. >> and part of it, as you know, reince priebus after the last election wrote a whole autopsy about what went wrong and the need for the republican party to reach out. at the top of that list was hispanics and women. this election has been about women. but probably not in the way the republican party wanted. >> absolutely. >> did newt gingrich help the cause with his spat with megyn kelly? >> i was shocked by it happening. i'm reading here about conflict of interest and corruption. voters want to know where you stand on health care. they want to know how you're
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in the end, they are tired of all of this personality-based politics because it isn't telling them what these candidates are going to do when they get elected. >> have you noticed we have done an "issues that matters" "series on "cbs this morning"? we are doing a whole issue. >> you guys communicate that you're real news and i know your ratings are up more than the other two shows but the news media overall is going to be held responsible for this. consultants are going to be held responsible for this. it's not just the candidates. >> responsible for the fact we spent too much time reporting when the crazy statements were made? >> reporting on what doesn't tell them what these people are going to do. >> what i mean, in lieu of policies. >> we have the right to know and the responsibility to know who they are as people. character absolutely matters. but we also have to know exactly what they are going to do because that is going to affect us. it affects our tax rates and where we live and they don't know that. >> don't you think the voters care about that.
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know what is happening with social security and where the candidates stand on education and have every right to be angry. when the election is over, it's not the end but only the beginning. >> november 9th is going to start a whole new chapter of conversation. >> i promise, i'll see a doctor on november 9th. >> ambulance is pulling up in the front right now! >> we have achieved something. we can work together on getting you good care. >> i'm not going to let it go either. thank you, frank luntz. is a proposal for tuition-free college enough to cut student debt? ahead we break down the candidates' plans for schools with former secretary of education and margaret spelling is joining us and part of our series that we call "issues that matter." first, it's time to check
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green room with new worries about medical privacy and possible higher insurance costs. you're watching "cbs this morning." ? i'm doing all right i'm not feeling too good ? and aunt susan was a a world champion. i inherited their can-do spirit. and their double chin. now, i'm going to do something about it. kybella? is the first of its kind injectable treatment that destroys fat under the chin, leaving an improved profile. for adults with a moderate amount of fullness... or a bit more. don't receive kybella? if you have an infection in the treatment area. kybella? can cause nerve injury in the jaw resulting in an uneven smile or facial muscle weakness, and trouble swallowing. tell your doctor about all medical conditions, including if you: have had or plan to have surgery or cosmetic treatments on your face, neck or chin; have had or have medical conditions in or near your neck or have bleeding problems. tell your doctor about all medicines you take. the most common side effects are swelling,
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from a rancher's perspective, we feel that often washington is removed from what we need. senator bennet is different. michael bennet has been at the ready and always willing to listen. when the federal government wanted to increase grazing fees, senator bennet stepped up and helped put a stop that. he commits to his word, i'm a republican, but i know that michael bennet trusts us and we trust him. i'm michael bennet and i approve this message. in today's "morning rounds." in today's "morning rounds." the price of private by workplace wellness programs help rein in insurance premiums by giving incentives to adopt
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interest groups for americans over 50 aarp, says federal regulations on those programs could compromise privacy and make people vulnerable to discrimination. the organization is suing the government's equal employment or not agency. what do you think of this, dr. david agus? >> the average insurance premium is 6,000. when this new law goes in place incentive to somebody and if they give their health information and submit to a medical exam. i think aarp is correct and we have to start thinking about privacy. that information may, doesn't mean it will, but it could be used in discriminatory practices. >> how would they penalize employees? >> you choose between two employees to go to a big assignment out of the office or to europe and you hear that one of them has diabetes, you may say, listen, i'm probably going to send the person who doesn't because i don't want that person
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and so it's something that in the back of people's minds may be there. we need to build this wall so health information on one side, employment decisions, corporate decisions on another side. there really needs to build something in place to separate them. >> isn't it supposed to be confidential? employers are encouraging you to sign up so you can benefit. y you suffer from something that really isn't life-threatening? >> they may be life-threatening. by the way, it's not just your information but your spouse, the people in your plans also. >> i don't have a spouse. >> well, let's talk about that, gayle! >> yes, let's! no, back to my original question. i'm not -- >> this is becoming shrink central! >> i'm being cute here. should not your personal information be kept confidential and not used against you? >> yes. not putting words in the aarp's mouth but i think what they are saying is put into place a
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know it will be kept confidential. >> do these wellness programs work? >> some work and some don't. i didn't people -- some work and some don't and we need to be better at looking at metrics and which ones do. health costs are going up and that story going over and over again. we are getting chronic illnesses and we have to figure out where the best place to do it to change behavior. >> i think it's good that a and provides workout facilities and encourages that healthy eating all of that and that should be the norm. i know you agree with that. >> is anybody arguing against that? creating wellness is crucial for employers because they want their employees to be healthy. >> plus, 20% of their business cost and economic reason too. so no question about it. they are saying let's do the structure so we can really separate private information and wellness programs. >> develop a better system. >> so when frank luntz said he hadn't been to the doctor in 20 years did you want to grab him
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>> there is a green room in there and we will talk and i will work on him. >> do you have your blood pressure thing with you? >> no but there is one right there on the wall in that graphic. >> let's fire that up. >> thank you, david agus. use that thing. camera captures a dare devil stunt that goes seriously wrong. ahead what a wing suit jumper said about his 90-mile-per-hour crash! into a tree! youza! how does this end? bi-flex. is morning" sponsored bo bi-flex. ...and high levels of humiliation in her daughter. in just 7 days, your joint comfort can be your kid's discomfort. osteo bi-flex. made to move. why do people put milk on cereal? why does your tummy go "grumbily, grumbily, grumbily"? no more questions for you! ooph, that milk in your cereal was messing with you, wasn't it? try lactaid, it's real milk, without that annoying lactose. good, right?
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? ? for millions of baby boomers there's a virus out there. a virus that's serious, like hiv, but it hasn't been talked about much. a virus that's been almost forgotten. it's hepatitis c. one in 30 boomers has hep c, yet most don't even know it. that's because hep c can hide in your body silently for years, even decades, without symptoms and it's not tested for in routine blood work. if left untreated, hep c can cause liver damage, even liver cancer. but there's important information for us: the cdc recommends all baby boomers get tested for hep c. all it takes is a simple one-time blood test. and if you have hep c, it can be cured. be sure to ask your doctor to get tested for hep c. for us it's time to get tested.
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it's no secret. donald trump isn't for us. and unfortunately, congressman coffman isn't, either. just listen. and as families struggle to make ends meet, coffman voted against equal pay for equal work 11 times. it gets worse. coffman said he would support donald trump for president. and that's all we really need to know.
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a california wing suit flyer in the french alps is thankful to survive a horrifying crash. eric dossantos glided off a mountain and going 90 miles an hour when this accident happened. a camera attached to his helmet captured the moment before he crashed into a tree. ouch. he posted the video this week. . dossantos is in the hospital with multiple injuries. he wrote on facebook that he should have died. but now he is working on his recovery. he has a lot to be thankful for as we approach thanksgiving. scary stuff. >> comedian and actor joel mchale makes fun of millennials and others in his new show. ahead why he says everyone will get his new cbs comedy oil the great indoors." >> "thursday night football"!
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scott tipton -- our congressman? for big-money campaign contributors? tipton sponsored a bill to give away our public lands to his out-of-state donors. over 30 colorado business leaders called tipton's plans, "a serious threat to the outdoor recreation industry and...thousands of jobs." gail schwartz will defend our public lands and won't put colorado's future up for sale. house majority pac is responsible
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? ? snoetsed . this is a time lapse view of the sunrise in connecticut! one of my favorite states this morning. the sun illuminates the clouds over new london. welcome back to "cbs this morning.? a nice way to start the beautiful sunrise and brush your teeth and put our clothes and let's go. presidential nominees have vastly different plans for education. university of north carolina president and former education secretary, margaret spellings in our toyota green room. hi, margaret spellings! go heels! to analyze their proposals. it's a part of our series "issues that matter."
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how he built a career emphasizing sarcasm and snark. time to show you some of the morning's headlines from around the globe. kyle swabbchwarber is a cubs le. he missed the rig season because of injury but he came back and helped the cubs overcome the cleveland indians last night and the cubs one 5-2. 43% of female surveyed by runners world magazine reported harassment. the number jumps to about 58% for women under 30. about half of joggers 30 to 35 said they have been harassed. three young women were killed this summer while running. "the washington post" reports that teacher absences are a crisis for many school districts. federal statistics show that more than 1 in 4 teachers are considered chronically abundant and miss two weeks of classes
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one says student achievement is impacted when teachers miss that much time. the cost of school is skyrocketedi iand loan debt is growing. we focus on the presidential nominee's plan for education. we look at everything from prekindergarten to college. >> we spend more money per pupil than anybody else and we are at the bottom of the list. we are going to change th we are bringing it locally and we will be doing with love and smarts, believe me. >> we are also going to strengthen education at every level, starting with universal pre-kindergarten education. >> we will rescue kids from failing schools by helping their parents send them to a safe school of their choice. >> i want good schools with good
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>> and common core, out, out. >> i have always supported national standards. i think we need better and fewer tests that are used for what tests should be used for. >> i'm going to work with congress on reforms to make sure that if universities want access to all of these special federal tax breaks and tax dollars, paid for by you, that they are going to make good-faith efforts to reduce the student debt, and to disspend their endowments on suits rather than things that don't matter. >> i will have colleges and universities tuition-free for families making less than $25,000 a year. >> student should not be asked to pay more on their loans than they with afford and the debt
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around their necks and make payments for 15 years, we will let them get on with their lives. >> we are going to change the way that debt works. we are going to bring down interest rates and we are going to let you pay it back as a percentage of your income, and if you do certain public service or national service jobs, we are going to forgive a lot of or all of the debt in return for you doing that. >> joining us to discuss this issue is margaret spellings. she was education secta she helped implement the no child left behind act and was part of the effort to start a national conversation about the future of higher education. spellings now serves as president of the university of north carolina. she oversees 17 campuses and nearly 225,000 students. good morning, secretary, president. >> general? >> yeah. we know each other from the bush administration and i was out there on the campaign trail.
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topic. >> absolutely. >> by the nominee. we just heard two candidates talking about education, is this an issue, you think, is front and center in this campaign? >> probably not as much as it was then but it speaks to millennials and middle class families and women and i think that is who they hope is listening. >> you said in your opening unc inaugural address we can't allow a child's future to be dependent on a in many cases, it is. >> exactly. that is our new responsibility in the higher education to make sure it's accessible and available for many, many more people than ever before. first generation and low income and minorities. >> how do we do that? >> we make college affordable for starters and one of the things that drew me for to north carolina it is a affordable state in relative terms but still a struggle. financial issues are often a barrier. >> i've heard you say that kids take too long getting through school. >> they do. >> what do you mean?
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to get in and out of college as quickly and as efficiently as possible in four years optimally. as opposed to six. our completion rates are often based on six-year rates. and, you know, time is money. and so to be very efficient about what you want to do, your trajectory to get through college so this you're not spending more time than you need to and spending more time taking exstrainious courses. >> hillary clinton says she supports the get rid of common core. do you think it makes sense to start from scratch? >> common core, these are state standards. this is a state-led effort that began with the governors and have been embraced now by 43 states. the reason that makes sense is because it allows technology and textbooks and teacher gopt and all sorts of things to be done in a more efficient way and a more cost-effective way. it also helps people like military families moving around
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and get off track because there's no coherence in the standards so it makes a lot of sense. >> a lot of talk in this campaign about millennials and how they will vote. a big issue for them is student death. >> absolutely. >> what should we do? >> obviously, the candidates are talking about more federal level and buying down rates for those current debtholders and mrs. clinton has talked about free college using federal funds. >> bernie sanders? >> yes, about -- college not free. nothing is free. so it's all a question who is going to pay the individual, the state, or the federal government. so, again, i think, you know, people need to have some skin in the game and, you know, we need to make sure that people are showing up ready to do college work, do it effectively and efficiently and have as little debt as possible. >> but there are three schools at the university of north carolina where the tuition is
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state. >> yes. >> how do you subsidize that? >> 2,000500 for out of state students. we will have three institutions beginning in the 18, 19, school year will have $500 a semester for tuition and that will drive growth in the student population and raise the quality of the student population and it's a great deal. you know, this legislature, the north carolina legislature has done something we have asked them to do in a long time. >> since you've been secretary, what federal power can a president really have in affecting students inequality or teacher inequality or education inequality? >> that varies whether you're talking about federal policy. we are a pretty big investor at the federal level and around financial aid and pell grants and work study and student loan programs and those things bill billions of dollars as opposed to k--12 we are a 9% investor so really you can do a lot
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need it. >> do you think there should be universal pre-k? >> i think we need to make sure that head-start which is income-based and need-based is the right kind of pre-k that it's, you know, sets the table for good learning. there is prereading skills and so forth. i think we need to get pre-k right before we expand it. >> there is also a debate whether everybody should go to college and would they be better off in community colleges and technical schools? t it's not about a ba baccalaurea program. i think mrs. clinton means when we say college we are talking about some post-level education as two years. like the high school diploma is a ticket to the american dream and now that is college, some
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talking about you think we should be? >> low expectations. president bush used to talk about the soft bigotry of soft expectations. the idea of half of our minority students, you know, can read on grade level or half of the minority students get out of the high school on time in disadvantaged communities is outrageous. half of the school lunches were obtained we would be on fire. we accept this underperformance and underachievement and we can't. >> you can't do do-overs but do you think president bush would have been if he wasn't bogged down in iraq? >> that's what he campaign on, absolutely. who knows. but he did a lot in the domestic agenda. that, notwithstanding. >> margaret spellings, good to have you at the table. i love your glasses! >> thank you. >> where did you get those? >> in north carolina. >> thank you very much. >> jamie wax finds out how funny comedian joe mchale can be. >> this set is unbelievably
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it's no secret. donald trump isn't for us. and unfortunately, congressman coffman isn't, either. and as families struggle to make ends meet, coffman voted against equal pay for equal work 11 times. it gets worse. coffman said he would support donald trump for president. and that's all we really need to know.
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? ee-e-e-oh-mum-oh-weh ? ? hush my darling... ? ? don't fear my darling... ? ? the lion sleeps tonight. ? [snoring.] ? hush my darling... ? [snoring.] ? don't fear my darling... ? ? the lion sleeps tonight. ? [snoring.] take the roar out of snore. yet another innovation only at a sleep number store. when i became governor, i knew we had to protect our colorado way of life. like rachel zenzinger, a former teacher who's fought for equal pay for equal work. daniel kagan championed property tax rebates to help seniors afford their utility bills. jenise may worked to cut taxes for 30,000 small businesses. and tom sullivan is a veteran who believes in an open and transparent government.
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? i'm talking about a majestic species on the brink of extinction. you union what it's like to look at a creature the last of its kind. >> yeah, we do. >> joel mchale is returning to cbs with a new comedy "the great indoors." he is known for "community." and fans loved his pop culture commentary when he was a host of "the suit." jamie wax visited mchale on the set of the studio. >> reporter: good morning. to say joel mchale is a busy man is a definite understatement. along with being a husband and father of two boys he is, of course, an actor, comedian, and author. we talked to him about what is behind that drive and it's clear comedy is at the root of it. joel mchale? >> yes, jamie! >> reporter: wax. >> wax. not a real last name.
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through an interview with joel mchale without laughing. >> did you hear that? >> i did. >> reporter: with a knack for comedic timing the 44-year-old has built a career cracking jokes using his trademark snark and dead pan delivery. >> i don't have an ego. my facebook photo is a landscape! >> reporter: for six seasons he starred as jeff winger on the cold comedy "comty but he attracted a community of fans hosting the "the soup. it end the last late year. about a year since you last worked on "the soup." >> once it was over, it was time. 12 years and, boy, it was a silly wonderful time. i could believe i was making money making fun of reality shows. i got tables, chairs. >> reporter: tonight, mchale
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sitcom "the great indoors." >> it is so incredible to meet you. i'm clark, online curator. >> clark,, obviously, made up job title. >> he plays jack gordon, a well-respected adventurer border tasked with managing a group of millennials in the digital department after magazine. >> you're holding a huge trophy. >> yeah. we got that because we all tried really hard. >> so did the team that won! trophies are for winners! >> ew! >> yes the show makes fun of millennials and young people, generation-x. everybody will get it oo. >> reporter: throughout his acting career mchale has continued sharpening his stand-up skills. in 2014, he delivered some of his zingerers at one of comedy's most high profile gigs -- the white house accordance dinner. >> i'm a big fan of president obama. i think he's one of the all-time great presidents.
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>> reporter: is it the kind of thing you're just sort of glad to survive the next day? >> once i got going i started having a very good time. when you go after the democrats, they don't laugh. the republicans laugh. and then vice versa. people are like, ew, oh, a lot of that. at one point i was just like, you're on a roller coaster, guys. >> reporter: is it true that you feel a sort of a fear at any given moment that your career could end? >> yes! i think even when i started making money. i still had at what is next? i got to figure out what is next. you always feel like acting or entertainment is just one big hustle. >> reporter: and if you want to learn more about the secrets to joel mchale's success, check out his new book "thank for the money and how to use my life story to become the best joel mchale you can be." part memoir and self-help guide
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a good joel mchale book. >> he looks like he likes to have a lot of fun. >> were any of the answers serious? >> no, he eventually would go to a joke. >> we are cheering for him. watch the series premiere tonight at 8:30/7:30 central on cbs. "the great indoors." >> penguin suit gets a whole new meaning at seaworld. the custom outfit helping one bird stay warm and keep up with her friends. you're watching "cbs this morning."
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,, this is the colorado none of us want to lose. i'm gail schwartz, and i'm running for congress to stop the sale of our public lands. se this land for ranching, hunting and fishing, not watch it sold off to the highest bidder. scott tipton wants to cut off our access to these lands for generations to come, killing thousands of jobs. i approved this message
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f0 hi, everyone. i'm alan gionet. happening today, attorneys will question more potential jurors for the trial in the alleged scream robbers. they are accused of violt workers and customers. they're accused in a crime spree that included two carjackings. the rest of that trial is planned for six weeks. happening today we'll learn more about a shooting in parker that left a deputy critically injured and suspect dead. the department is releasing body camera worn by the officer who shot that suspect. what it reveals at noon.
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ware's super bowl ring and other items. what we're learning about their arrests. and we'll get the latest from italy as crews work to assess the damage from a pair of earthquakes at noon today. few accidents to check on. joel is watching them for you. couple of trouble spots. the good news is the volume is really starting to drain off. we're getting a little more space between those cars. look at these accidents we have. one southbound along i-225 at university. and this accident westbound direction of i-70 past wadsworth. slowing in that eastbound direction as well. then we've got slowing northbound along wadsworth.
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a man attacked me in a parking garage. tried to stab me with an 8-inch knife. but i carry a pistol. i fight back. that's why i'm still here. every woman has a right to defend herself with a gun if she chooses. hillary clinton disagrees with that. don't let politicians take away your right to own a gun. donald trump supports my right to own a gun. when i became governor, i knew we had to protect our colorado way of life. it's why i need a good team in the state senate. like rachel zenzinger, a former teacher who's fought for equal pay for equal work. daniel kagan championed property tax rebates to help seniors afford their utility bills. jenise may worked to cut taxes for 30,000 small businesses. and tom sullivan is a veteran who believes in an open and transparent government.
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welcome back. 53 degrees up i-70 in genesee. look at that beautiful shot. we have a few high clouds on top of us, but temperatures are already warming up quickly. we're up to 52 downtown denver. dia is at 59. still in the 40s across larimer and weld counties. fort collins and greeley also. in the mountains temperatures in the 30s now. ok on. record highs expected not only in the metro area but around the state records are in jeopardy today, including grand junction. aspen and gunnison close to records. 81 today in denver. 82 tomorrow. both those numbers records. mid-70s for your weekend.
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,, it's no se and unfortunately, congressman coffman isn't, either. donald trump isn't for us. just listen. and as families struggle to make ends meet, coffman voted against equal pay for equal work 11 times. it gets worse. coffman said he would support donald trump for president. and that's all we really need to know.
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