tv PBS News Hour PBS January 22, 2024 3:00pm-4:00pm PST
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♪ amna: on the "newshour" tonight, new hampshire voters make their choice between the only two remaining candidates, donald trump and nikki haley. geoff: the idea of a ceasefire in exchange for hostages and any prospect for a two-state solution. amna: millions of americans lose health insurance because of policy changes since the pandemic.
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>> losing medicaid coverage maybe for a short period while someone is trying to get re-enrolled can result in lack of kaifer. care. >> major funding for the pbs "newshour" has been provided by -- the ongoing support of these individuals and institutions. and friends of the "newshour" including leonard and judy and peter blum, and william and hollywood it foundation, advancing ideas and supporting institutions to promote a better world at hewlitt. com and these individuals and
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institutions. ♪ this program was made possible by the corporation for public broadcasting and by contributions from viewers like you. thank you. amna: welcome to the "newshour." there are mere hours to go before new hampshire voters head to the polls tomorrow morning for the presidential primary. on the republican side former president trump is seeking a sequel to his victory in the iowa caucuses. geoff: and president biden is expected to win even though his
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name isn't on the ball the on the. political correspondent is in new hampshire. lisa, this is an unusual new hampshire primary. the race is down to two candidates and president biden's name isn't even on the ballot. how are the campaigns seeing it? >> this is the first primary and the biden and trump campaigns and chris christie dropping out and ron desan antonio ties. for the trump campaign and make sure nikki haley doesn't get any momentum. and want to stop a rebellion. he has challengeses of his own making. what is happening here in new hampshire is the idea for both parties, any chance to avoid a trump rematch has to happen here. >> thank you so much. reporter: she is the last
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republican standing against president trump. >> that is the sound. reporter: with ron desantis out, nikki haley faces the test she wanted, a showdown. >> when you vote on tuesday, you are going to be making a decision, do you want more of the same? reporter: haley pisms trump as -- pitches trump as ayotteic. this is her most most competitive state in not naming slavery as the cause of the civil war. haley trails trump and needs steve, a trump supporter until his 12-year-old daughter asked them to listen to other candidates.
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they became campaign celebrities. >> three. chris: tee events. have she talked about how much debt we acquired, the largest debt of any sitting president. what do i want to do for my daughter and her future. reporter: what hannah wants is not trump. >> he is going to call nikki a bird brain. i don't want my president to be like that. >> i'll overlook all of that because he loves america and loves americans. reporter: there is unmatched fervor and crowd size. >> everyone is endorsing me. reporter: trump faces 91 felony counts argues that he should be immune. >> this isn't just me. they have to be given immunity.
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reporter: many believe trump's lies and others slug it off and say they see a strong man. >> number one is immigration. i came in door, not the back door. >> i love the fact that he is taking care of our border and only one doing it. >> how do you feel other trump supporters. >> fat, uneducational. i speak another language and several degrees. >> it is a force in which haley has some chance thanks to voters like interior yeah. >> i'm a lifelong democrat and i voted. and came to new hampshire. reporter: walls of photos but switching to vote for haley. initially to block trump.
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>> to be honest with you, that is part of my thought process. having spent time at all the town halls and events. i admire her. reporter: she has lost some faith with the democratic party, which stripped new hampshire of its delegates after the they kept the early date ordering the party to be moved back. >> to say i'm disappointed. i'm not going to vote in it. >> pick up the sign. reporter: the primary debate debacle -- >> we need to make sure we put joe biden on the top of the ticket. reporter: it is in the hands of a rag-tag campaign of volunteers. >> no one has done anything like
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this before. reporter: a former nominee started it with six people on a zoom call and now -- >> we are organizing across the state and communities and that is a win. reporter: people must write in biden's name for him to get their vote. >> this is where we are at right now. so let's do what we can to get him in office. >> i'm very worried that he is going to have a less than delightful showing. and i think he's -- the democratic party has made it harder for him. reporter: harder for him but opens up a small chance, maybe the only chance for biden's opponent like williamson who has been reaching out to voters here for years. but none may benefit than dean phillips who is a longshot but
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the best shot any democrat has of derailing biden. he is drawing lawmaker and weekend crowd. after a bumpy start, phillips now touts his rejection of p.a.c. money and reform including housing. >> best and brightest americans no matter who is in the white house. he is blunt. >> i don't know how anybody can determine he is anybody but weak. reporter: it is working with some of the young -- >> i think every campaign has to start with every individual voter. reporter: and this man who was considering voting for haley. >> if the vote was right now, i would vote for dean phillips. reporter: is that a wasted vote?
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>> no. you should vote for who you want to support. reporter: all of this is one question in january about november. >> the two most disliked politicians in america, trump and biden. reporter: if the u.s. is to veer away, someone else must have a very big night like phillips or haley. >> i'm afraid tuesday if she does not win here, it is all over. reporter: one more day could set the direction. one factor are independent or undeclared voters in new hampshire. over 40% of registered voters are undeclared and can vote in the democratic or republican primary. as you know, they don't like to be told who is going to win. geoff: what is the haley campaign and what she needs to do tomorrow night? reporter: nikki haley didn't think they could pull out a win.
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this is favorable. they are saying they want to have a strong second place. the margin matters a lot. she has to prove she can gain momentum and build something in her own home state south carolina, which is next. geoff: for the democrats the fact that president biden isn't contesting new hampshire, that gives a bit of a window to the long shot of candidacy of phillips and williamson, what are you hearing? reporter: this is a plot test. this is an extraordinary test and president biden is blocking the new hampshire primary going first and coming off the ballot. voters who want to vote for him, let's show you the new hampshire ballot. look at the long list of names for people who have qualified. at the bottom, voters have to write in joe biden. the secretary of state here in new hampshire does have
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parameters where it doesn't have to be joe biden but those reading the ballot have to believe that the voter intended to write joe biden. there are challenges of not president biden's making. there was a call that nbc news got a hold of it and there was a voice of joe biden manipulated that they shouldn't show up to the polls at all. joe biden underperforms here and gets less than 50% and dean phillips is getting better and bigger clout. one of the biggest surprises and another strange thing in these strange times, i met several who are voting between nikki haley and dean phillips. they don't want it to be a
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trump-biden rematch. geoff: join us tomorrow night for live coverage at 11:00 p.m. eastern right here on pbs. amna: in the days, other headlines, israeli forces blasted their way into southern gaza. ground troops stormed one hospital and arrested hostages. patients powered into a third site as officials warn the facility is overwhelmed and close to collapse. >> with the expansion of ground operations, we received many of the injured. there's no space for them. and the siege on thener by neighborhoods has made medical
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difficult and available resources. amna: it is a hub for hamas and hospitals serve as nerve centers for fighters. the white house says they are using hospitals as shield and hamas has to protect innocent people. the u.s. and british military have conducted attacks against houthi rebels. the u.s. military denied it. on sunday, u.s. authorities called off the search for two navy seals and lost at see -- sea. united nations' report has shed new light on restrictions that women face under the taliban. access to work, health care and travel have been curbed for single women and those without a male guardian.
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enforcement measures involving physical violence are demeaning and dangerous for women and girls. in india today, prime minister inaugurated a major hindu temple on a mosque and dedicated to the behind you god. ceremonyees were seen as a political victory who is seeking a third term in office and hailed the event as symbolism of hindu nationalism. >> january 22, 2024 is not a date written in the calendar but dawn of a new era. by breaking slavery a nation is standing up dearriving strength, this is how new history is created. amna: no boycotted and muslims decried the destruction of their
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temple in 1992. crews in memphis worked to repair water lines that were damaged by days of arctic cold. 600,000 people spent fourth day of frozen water alert. the cold is blamed for 75 deaths nationwide this month. the supreme court will hear an appeal this fall from an oklahoma death mate. richard glossip was sentenced to death but the attorney general says he did not receive a fair trial. and they allowed border patrol agents will cut wire. and today's ruling stands until a final decision. on wall street, stocks moved higher according to profit
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reports. the dough jones average gained 138 points to close about 38,000, a new high. the nasdaq rows 34 points. and two passings of note, dexter scott king, younger son of martin luther king junior died. he was 7 years old when his father was assassinated and he became an attorney. dexter scott king was 62 years old. and acclaimed hollywood director "in the heat of a night" working with a white racist sheriff and directed "if i hadler on the roof" and moonstruck." we discuss the vice president's
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new push to highlight abortion rights. stanford's the wingest coach in basketball history. a brief but spectacular take on college more accessible for undocumented students and much more. >> this is the pbs "newshour" from washington and in the west from the walter cronkite at arizona state university. amna: last night ahead of the new hampshire primary and presidential field is a two-person race after governor desantis dropped out. democrats will be missing a key name, president joe biden. i'm joined by amy of the cook political report and tama ra of n.p.r.
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days after lamenting about republicans who are lining up to kiss the ring, ron desantis endorses donald trump and what does it say to you? >> the campaign started with so much promise but from the moment it actually launched, it was troubled. he launched on x, the social media site. it was a total disaster and technical disaster and from there, his campaign burned through cash and relied on an outside super p.a.c. and turns out turning your campaign to a super p.a.c. may not well. and burned through campaign managers and super p.a.c. heads and it was a failed campaign. finding a message that worked with this republican electorate.
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he was saying he was trump without the baggage and a lot of republican republican voters don't care about the baggage. >> he had a lot of money and "new york post" crowned as the future after he won big in the midterms. what happened? >> i think it is summed up pretty well, he just never found a message that was going to resonate with an electorate that really likes donald trum trump. there were really problems with his campaign. but a lot of it is with the republican party and who republican voters are. if you get republican establishment, the elite class, the donor class, they want anybody but donald trump but the
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nominee. that's not what voters want. and that has been apparent since 2016. for all the money and the effort that a lot of those folks giving him money wanted to believe that this is the formula and unseat donald trump with a candidate that is a more like donald trump, the problem as one republican strategist said to me early on is that idea of being trump without the baggage, what he was was trump-like and voters can get the caller yes of trump they didn't want the diet. amna: two-person republican race. and we have a new poll while haley has picked up support from independents. 52% of potential republican primary voters would pick trump.
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this was conducted before desantis dropped out. >> desantis is much more of a trump-like candidate. people who supported ron desantis didn't want to stop trump at all costs. desantis endorsed him and is rallying behind him. many of trump's advantagished rivals are going back to 2016 and 2020 and they are rallying with him at rallies in the state. for nikki, ron desantis doesn't really help. but it gives you are her the two-person race. but will give her clarity about the appetite for a trump
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alternative. this is new hampshire. and independent voters can vote in the republican primary and i have spoken to a left-leaning independent voters who under any other description would be democrats, but they are registered independents. those sorts of voters knt vote in the republican primary in the states to come. >> there aren't enough of them. and if you look at the polls, she is doing well among those independent voters, but not as well among that republican vote. what could help, it could make the margins smaller. a bunch of people are coming to vote that pollsters didn't pick up. in 2008, polls suggested that barack obama was going to win in new hampshire and that didn't happen and hillary clinton actually won.
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i don't think we will see that on tuesday but trump is still ahead. for haley, this is a do-or-die state. the electorate is taylor-made for her candidacy. to not win here, it would be the beginning of the end of the candidacy. amna: the incumbent president's name is part of a write-in the campaign and new hampshire state law they still go first even though the d.n.c. would not be on the ballot. what are we hearing from the biden administration. roe v. wade is essential and here is a new ad. >> i think donald trump bears responsibility for these restrictive laws. we need leaders that will protect our rights and not take
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them away. amna: there are 12 states where abortion is or could be on the ballot this fall. is this still going to be a potent force as the biden administraon wants it to be at the end of this year? >> i can tell you how the biden re-election campaign feels about it. vice president harris is launching a tour where she is talking about reproductive rights and starting in wisconsin and voters cared about this issue and because there was a restrictive abortion ban on the books. tomorrow, the president and vice president, first lady and second gentleman will be rallying in virginia. so this is clearly going to be a centerpiece of the biden campaign but frame it as a freedom issue and say that it's
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not just about one health care procedure, it's about freedom and moving it in with other things like gun safety and the big issues of democracy that we have seen biden talking about already. amna: it was interesting in that ad she makes the connection between donald trump and the choices he made inputting many of the current justices onto the supreme court and these restrictive laws in states like texas where he she is from. in 2022 democrats made the individual republican candidate out of step, just showing what those candidates had said about abortion access. they had restrictive views on the issue but it wasn't about donald trump in 2022 but the individual candidates. the biden campaign needs to make that connective tissue between donald trump and this issue of freedom and abortion access.
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>> donald trump helps them with that. he once again claimed credit at biden headquarters and they were quite pleased. amna: thank you for joining us. good to see you both. thank you so much. geoff: as the war in gaza nears four months since the october 7 hamas attacks in israel, the debate inside that nation has become starker. 130 hostages are still held. a world outraged that the palestinian death total and clear disagreements with washington as the israeli prime minister says he'll stay the course. reporter: israeli politics is always a contact support. but today in israeli parliament
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committee meeting the families erupted. [speaking foreign language] >> if this was your child, what would you have done. reporter: they are challenging the government including outside president netanyahu's house. the debate is now israel's war cabinet. a war cabinet observer and former army chief. in december, his son was killed fighting in gaza. he promised to make the right decisions for those who have sacrificed. last week he criticized netanyahu and said the best way was a ceasefire. >> impossible to return the hostages alive without a deal. and he is selling lies.
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no other way to put it. reporter: netanyahu has rejected any deal to uncover hamas tunnels that hid hostages under the gaza city. >> i reject hamas' monsters. only total victory will return our hostages. reporter: u.s. officials said there are negotiations over a longer pause for release of all the hostages. there is a longer term netanyahu disagreement with the u.s. on friday, president biden reiterated and said israel's security would be guaranteed by a two-state solution. but over the weekend netanyahu made clear at least publicly, that is exactly what he said. >> my insistence is prevented
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the palestinian state which would be a threat. >> a two-state solution is the best path forward. reporter: john kirby put the onus on israel. >> going to require leadership and leadership there. reporter: in the next steps over the best ways to release the hostages and two-state solution, we get two views, a brigadier general had a career in the israeli defense force. and retired major general, had a 42 year career in the israeli defense force. thank you and welcome to the "newshour." what is the best way to get the
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release of the hostages currently in gaza? >> the best way is not the way that we are trying to do it now, which is guided by some theory, total force, force only, no ploamgz, no political -- diplomacy and no political direction and not that we shouldn't have the first 46 weeks that's causing the hostages to wilt and be in greater jeopardy. we need to create some kind of deal that will include stepping down, stepping back or doing whatever it takes to create a deal that will have a political dimension to it. reporter: should they do to do whatever it takes to have a deal? >> in order to defeat hamas, they actually bringing a threat
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to israel. it is a threat. and we cannot focus ourselves on the other mission to release the hostages. we are working with both sides with these two efforts simultaneously. and yet, the offer that was put on the table is in my eyes a kind of unconditional surrender. end of hamas to stop the war. geoff: . reporter: the israeli government is both pursuing a military mission to pressure hamas and willing to pursue this path and it is willing and considering a longer pause for the release of hostages?
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>> the more we apply force, they will be in a last stand type of mind-set and if they get into a last stand of mind-set, it will probably kill all the hostages and other stand is they are looking to secure an exit of some kind and in that case, they would use the hostages. and the logic of that situation suggests that we should go for a deal as quickly as we can and if it requires a ceasefire, do it now because the logic of this situation either there is a deal or we lose all the hostages. reporter: could more military pressure lead to the death of the hostages? >> that is really -- everyone worries about it. and that is a sign in terms of
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israel not to defeat hamas in that occasion. we are not just asking them to release the hostages. and main goal is the war. reporter: let's look beyond today. how do you believe should run gaza after the war ends? >> ultimately, it is a palestinian environment and population and if anyone leads it, it is palestinian authority of one kind or another. and what the world is saying, the world being united states, europe, saudi arabia, jordan, egypt and more are telling us, yes, it needs to be a palestinian entity and needs to be rolled up with the palestinians in the west bank,
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i. e, the palestinian authority. reporter: who do you think should run gaza? >> israel could really support gaza to be a kind of state and we are expecting and we have the right to expect that this state will be and the palestinian authority is alliances. far away from that, they are supporting terrorists. united states will insist that gaza will stay completely out of palestinian hangdz. ok. not palestinian authority. i don't believe the promise of president biden that he can
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change the entity of the palestinian authority. reporter: what about those criticisms that the palestinian authority has incited palestinians towards violence and is corrupt and is unpopular against palestinians in the west bank already? >> i disagree with the description but i don't accept the status of history. the germans and japanese were the devil, were villains and egypt was out to destroy. we need hope and future and maintain power and security control for a long time and requierl demilitarization for a long time. reporter: there are some who criticize netanyahu based or personal decisions trying to extend his prime ministership as
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opposed -- >> he is leading our nation in a very complicated war. i don't believe that soldiers would sacrifice their lives for a personal interest of netanyahu. they are struggling for something much more subject lime than political unrest of somehow. so i don't believe in it. reporter: thank you very much. >> thank you very much. geoff: medicaid recipients had to prove their eligibility to renew their coverage but stopped during the onset of the
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pandemic. but that re-nolment provision ended in april. and since then more than 15 million have been disenrolled by medicaid. we are joined by the program on medicaid and the uninsured. jennifer, what accounts for the 15 million disenrollments? >> i think it is a combination of factors. so because states kept people on the medicaid program for three years during the pandemic, there are a number of people who have had changes in circumstances. they have gotten new jobs and increased new hours at their existing jobs and because of that increase in income are no longer eligible. but we know there are a lot of people who are losing coverage for what are called procedural or paperwork reasons and this is a situation in which the state
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is disenrolling someone even though she don't have information to confirm whether the person is still eligible. geoff: who is most affected by that? and what about children covered by medicaid? how are they affected? >> we are seeing disenrollments among children. going into this process, because medicaid eligibility for children is higher than that for adults there would be fewer disenrollments for children. among reporting states and we only have data from 23 states and showing it broken out by age, children account for nearly 40% of all disenrollments. nationally, that translates to 5 million children losing coverage. geoff: what are they losing? what is at stake here? >> they are losing access to medical care and many people on
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medicaid are dealing with chronic health conditions or mental health issues for which they need ongoing medication and treatment. and particularly for kids, that means losing access to needed -- medication for diabetes. losing medicaid coverage even if it is a short period while someone is trying to get re-enrolled can lead to lapses in care and people not getting needed medication or see doctors or therapists that can help them control whatever health care issue they are dealing with. geoff: looking at the numbers, there is a wide range of disenrollment rates. 61% in texas, 13% in maine and oregon, why is that?
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>> there are a lot of different factors at play here. some of it has to do when states started disenrolling people and others started earlier than others. some have taken greater steps to ensure that people who are still eligible remain on the program. so what states are required to do is to conduct what are called ex-parte reviews to see if an individual qualifies for medicaid before they send a renewal notice asking them to complete forms and provide other documentation. states that have higher ex-parte rates have lower disenrollment rates because they are are able to renew more people without asking people to take action which can be burdensome or lead
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to problems with people not receiving notice in the mail or not being able to gather the required documents that the state is requesting. geoff: if someone believes they have been improperly disenrolled, what can they do? >> contact the medicaid agency as quickly as possible. this could be difficult in many states because there are longer wait times for many call centers when people try and get through. but my advice is to stay patient and continue to try and get through to the medicaid agency. if not that, there are community-based organizations and entities called navigateors and enrollment assist tosser that can help people total complete their renewal process or to challenge if they think they have been improperly disenrolled.
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geoff: thanks, jennifer. we appreciate it. amna: head coach became the winningest coach in women's basketball coach. won 1203 games and 45 seasons as the head coach, 38 of them at stanford. three of them in national championships and led the u.s. team to owe limb olympic gold. more than 30 of her players have gone onto the wnba. to discuss the impact, we are joined by christine brennan of saw today. and how -- "usa today."
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>> because we are now in the absolute opinion call of women's basketball in terms of interest and the people that the stories. one of the great people in the game, one of the smartest coaches, male or female, someone who would rather read a book rather than be online, works out every day, plays bridge, a legend of the game, men's and women's. but the reality it is women's basketball and leading women throughout title 9 as we watched this work its way through our country and changing women and girls' opportunity.
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she is one of those great historical and still among us and still coaching and it's just that a fantastic day for women's sports and sports in general which she has passed coach k and my goodness, the nation has. and wonderful to see the acclaim she is getting for this. amna: she has evolved and coaching since 24 but her players described this calmness about her. tell us about her as a coach and a leader. >> i covered her during the olympics in 1996. i covered here in a couple of ncaa tournaments and won in 1990 and won in 1992 and 2021. talk about longevity and the
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ability to adapt with the game and the fact that she takes breaks and works out. she is all consumed. and in another way she really wants to have an old-school life where she wants to read and get away from it all. and because that, she has stayed sharp and fresh and the players love her and doing this at stanford one of our great academic institutions in our country. and can't get any player in stanford. and she is doing it at the most competitive time. amna: the 1996 dream team was the one to watch. and lisa leslie and rebecca.
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the impact of that team and their win and the fan base and the enthusiasm, that is what paved for the wnba. and talk about the impact not just on the olympic team and basketball and the establishment of a league. >> that was the atlanta game. a lot of pressure on that team. she took it over and took a year off from stanford to coach that dream team. in 1992, u.s. women won the bronze and the pressure was home. home olympics in atlanta. what was riding on it? there are two leagues that came out of those olympics in 1996 after her team won the gold and wnba and professional opportunities for women, the title 9 and those opportunities
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you could become and make money and that is part of the victory. amna: we saw that a new broadcast deal for over $900 million, most of that deal is made of women's basketball games. what does it say to you about where the game is today? >> if anyone watched katherine clark and selling every arena and latter day harlem globe trotter situation. and l.s.u. winning that. the tv ratings on that were so close to the men's race and never seen a woman watch the game and then also the fact that it was couple million short of where the men had.
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that's where we are. second 50 years of title 9 and the nation is falling in love. the girl next door. the girl you see in the kitchen every morning and the support is there. and we found out that march madness, the title was not being allowed for the women's game. that all changessed a few years ago. and now the women are getting their due and getting big contracts and see the fans and in conjunction with everything else coming together to show you how much the country is falling in with women's basketball and the women stars. amna: great time for the game. christine brennan, thank you. great to talk to you.
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geoff: the executive director of the dream project supporting students whose immigration status may poise challenges. as a former undocumented student herself, she saw firsthand the barriers from realizing dreams. dreamers pursuing higher education. >> i was five years old when we moved from bow live yeah to the -- bo live yeah. because we were undocumented and couldn't go back to bolivia. it wasn't until high school there were other ramifications for my status. being undocumented in high school, i wanted to prepare for
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college. that was 2010 and in virginia, no in-state tuition which meant most tuitions were twice or three times as much. the dream act was a legislative bill that offered a pathway to citizenship. it was something that was introduced in 2000. when i was in high school, it still had not passed and i was a strong advocate and i was on the senate floor when the dream act was voted on. other dreamers had come from texas and california, from states all across the and massive group of college-aged students. we were holding hands and people were whispering, 15 votes, 35 votes. mr. mccain, no. mr. inhofe, no.
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>> it became apparent it wasn't going to pass. >> the motion is not agreed to. >> we were in shock. and we had to figure out. we were talking about what we could do. with the support of our families started the dream project which is the nonprofit that i'm the executive direct director of and have a program that offered scholarships. our parents dl bake sales, dinners. we were able to run enough money and give out four scholarships. since my own graduation, the organization had grown a lot. and had a formal mentoring programs and they are pursueing p h d.
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and education is a great equalizer. young americans are headed to college this fall and thousands will be undocumented. the students have amazing academic backgrounds are involved in their school communities and asset to the american community. >> my name is karen and brief spectacular take on dreamers pursuing college education. geoff: watch it on our web site. amna: the pbs "newshour" student reporting. hosted by new two teen hosts, the series focuses on mental health challenges young people. >> made by teens for teens. >> it is hosted by two teens. >> we need some kind of environment where we can reach
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out and get help. >> we covering topics. >> gender and masculinity. music. student reporters produce -- >> i'm lebron james. >> trying to stay connected to friends. >> everybody's story can help a person save a life. >> there is a lot on our minds and talking about it helps. >> it is in collaboration. listen to where you get your podcasts. amna: season four "on our minds." geoff: tomorrow night, full coverage of the new hampshire primary here on the "newshour" and special live coverage at 11:00 p.m. that is the "newshour" for
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tonight. amna: on behalf of the entire "newshour" team, thanks for joining us. >> funding has been provided by. architect. gate keeper. mentor. to help you live. well planned. >> q nod i on a voyage. the world awaits. a world of flavor. diverse destinations. and immess i have experiences. a world of leash -- leisure and white star service.
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>> kendedaa fund through investments in transformative leaders. more at kendeda fund. org. supported by the john d. and contractor rin t. mask arthur foundation. and with the ongoing support of these institutions. this program was made possible by the corporation for public broadcasting and by contributions from viewers like you. thank you. [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy].
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wow, you get to watch all your favorite stuff. it's to die for. now you won't miss a thing. this is the way. the xfinity 10g network. made for streaming. hello, everyone. welcome to amanpour and company. here's what is coming up. has rockets and missiles are exchanged across the middle east, we get the latest from our reporters on the ground in lebanon and israel. hong kong tycoon faces a life sentence for violating beijing's national security law. we discussed the case with his son and one of the people heading up his defense. the reality on ukraine's front lines. my conversation with ukrainian journalist and author. why we need to ditch our doom and gloom approach
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KQED (PBS) Television Archive Television Archive News Search Service The Chin Grimes TV News ArchiveUploaded by TV Archive on