tv Craig Melvin Reports MSNBC July 2, 2021 8:00am-9:00am PDT
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ease the burden on working families, and these investments are critical. i'm going to fight to see them enacted and signed into law. we had a chance to seize this economic momentum of the first months of my administration not just to build back but to build back better. this much is already clear. we're on track, the right track, our plan is working and we're not going to let up now. so i want to thank everyone. i wish you all a happy fourth of july. we're going to be able to go to ball games, sit in stadiums, be with your families at backward barn cues as we hoped and we're going to make more progress. god bless america and may god protect our troops.
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>> is the draw down going to be done in the next few days. >> we're on track exactly where we expect it to be. we want today make sure there is enough running room to make sure that we would not be able to do it all nm september. it is a rational draw down with our allies. so there is nothing unusual about it. >> we're in afghanistan for 20 years now. and i think i met with the afghan government here and in the white house. and i think they have the capacity to sustain a government, they're going to have to be down the road, but i am concerned that they deal with
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the eternal issues to be able to generate the kind of support they need nationwide to maintain the government. >> if there is evidence that kabul is threatened, some of the intelligence reports suggesting that it could be in six months. do you think you have the capability to help provide any kind of air support, military support, to keep the support? we have worked out a ka pass they can be value added, but the afghans will have to do it. >> i'm not going to answer any more questions on afghanistan, look, it is the 4th of july.
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i'm concerned that you're asking me asks that i will answer next week but it's the holiday weekend, i'm going to celebrate it, great things are happening. question have a record number of new jobs, covid deaths are down, wages are up faster than any time in 15 years, we're bringing our troops home. all across america people are going to ball games and doing good things. i'll analyze all of your legitimate questions -- >> are you concerned there is potential this weekend that there will be a new covid outbreak? >> i'm concerned that people who have not gotten vaccinated have the capacity to spread through the people not vaccinated. i'm concerned there will be
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another upbreak, but i am concerned that lives will be lost. i was even reading today that there is speculation and some judgment coming out that you may be able to communicate the new variant to your pets. so i say not totally facetiously, those that have not been vaccinated, you don't think you want to go through it, it doesn't hurt, it's accessible, it's free, it's available, and don't think about just yourself, think about your family and those around you. that's what we should be thinking about today. 4th of july this year is the 4th of july last year. it will be even better next year. thank you all.
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look, all i know, and i really mean this, is do my best to layout what i think the country has to do. try to be as per way sieve as i can, and thus far it is working. thank you. >> do you think it is fair that the olympics -- good friday morning to you. craig melvin here, president biden there at the white house. one of the big stories that
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we're following including a big burns of wind in the sales of our economy. u in this morning june marking the 6th straight month that our country added back jobs you just heard president biden talking about what the new june jobs report means as we navigate our way out of this pandemic. >> the last time the economy grew at this rate was 1984. well, it is getting close to afternoon here, the sun is coming out. >> here are the numbers for june. 850,000 jobs added. that's more than was expected. that is just short of the entire population of south dakota. the unemployment rate ticked up to 1.5%. dulling the shine a bit for every day americans, pain at the
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bump. triple a says this could be the second bustiest weekend of all time. right now we're seeing the highest gas prices since 2014. we're also keeping our eyes on surf side, florida. roughly 25 minutes from now officials there are going to update us on the search and rescue efforts that continue. structural concerns halted again early thursday. and there is a new potential complication. hurricane elsa. the first named hurricane of the 2021 season. we'll go to surfside, florida when they start their press briefing. president biden's comments about our economy's momentum, monica alba covering the white hous st.
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monica, let me start with you. this positive jobs report, monica alba, what does it do for the white house's calculations moving forward? >> as pacted the president did say that the recovery will not be instand or flipped on and off. there is still ups and downs but the president arguing that these are very encouraging signs and he a i tributed a lot of that to the legislation that he already passed. the fact that vaccinations are really up nationwide despite the fact that they will miss their own self imposed goal.
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they have more than one dose of the vaccine. the white house is trying to frame this as other benchmarks of progress that we have seen on the virus and the pandemic, specifically. that's something the president has mentioned in every single read out saying that at least because that is trending in the right direction so too is the economy. he said that the economy is on the move and covid is on the run. he used that to dove tale that with a push for a infrastructure plan. take a listen to exactly how he made that argument. >> that human infrastructure is as essential as ever. it can help us create more jobs, ease the burden on working families and strengthen our economy. as the plans i put forward
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tackle our climate crisis, that are broad and deep, i'm going to fight to see them enacted and signed into law. >> i thought it was notable that the president touted the fact that the covid relief bill got through. he said it doesn't really matter because look at all of the good that he did. i thought that was notable. now he says he wants to go the bipartisan roup. democrats are pursuing that on their own through this process. so he is continuing to preview and make the case for that two-track plan. >> it was quite the victory lap. president biden by leading the poem yud and coming back. so what the president is saying is one thing, are you looking at the actual report digging through the data.
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>> we are in an economic recovery, the president says the economy is on the rise. we're seeing jobs come back. business is booming, workers are getting paid more and consumers are spending. however we do have an enormous amount of open jobs in this country. i spoke to marty walsh earlier today and i asked about the expanded unemployment benefits continuing through september, and if they're keeping people from going back to work. watch this. >> i believe they needed to keep food on the table, a roof over their head. if you look at the last six months, you look at the american rescue plan, as more and more people get vaccinated, more and
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more money goes back into industries like child care, we're going to hopefully continue to see that number grow. >> craig, those expanded benefits run out in september. but it is a tricky argument that the administration is making right now. pushing more spending and infrastructure. monica was just talking about it. a ton of money put towork, the economy is on the right track. possibly we should slow our role a little bit before we spend trillions and trillions more. >> help us understand the political intersection of all of this. we heard the word inflation used a lot in the past few weeks especially. you noted an emerging in
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politico. biden fights to win the narrative, how does the jobs report and what he is saying this morning shaping that fight that you wrote about over the narrative about our economic recovery? >> right, good to be with you. and i want to see stephanie do her next hit from on that merry go round. you noted high gags prices. hotel prices are up, all travel is up, that ispinching a little bit. if you include jobs, we're still around 9 million jobs short of where it should be. they are added each month but there was enough employees available to go back. the republicans will continue to argue that the benefits are too
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generous, and that we don't need to spend four to six trillion more to add to possible inflation. but the bottom line is that biden tried to do the "good morning america" argument. it could pinch, it could be problematic, and we're not growing jobs quite as fast as we need to be to get back to where we were. >> ben, how worried should we be about inflation? >> i would worry about it. the fed is worried about it now. increasingly so. we're a little higher than their target. i would not panic about it. they say it is transitory. the biden administration says it's transitory. when we get the workers back, the supply starts to meet demand, prices will ease up and we won't see run away inflaix. but now we're right.
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you look at the prices, the food prices, the travel prices, and that starts to eat into real income. that feels bad, and it can be problematic. >> steph, did you want to weigh in on that, i think we cut you off. >> on the inflation front the think is, craig, prices are up but people are pathos prices in restaurants and hotels. you're seeing travel and consumer spending up in a very big way, so will prices go back down? i don't know did any of you go to dinner last night? i'm guessing you ordered your dinner and a drink. will they lower their prices? unlikely. what i wanted to say to you, craig, is we talk about things getting more expensive remember to put it in perspective. things cost way more because this time last year we were in pure lock down. of course things are higher. they're not as high as you
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think, though, it just feels that way give wherein we came from. >> and now you're just a few feet away from a carousel. thank you to all of you, enjoy the holiday weekend. attorney general merrick garland just made a huge announcement. the doj is halting federal excuses. it is while they conduct a review of policies and protocols. he points to serious concerns that popped up from race to exonerations. he notes that the department of justice must ensure that everyone in the federal criminal justice system is not only afforded the rights of the constitution of the laws of the united states but is also treated fairly and humanely.
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former president donald trump's administration resumed the executions. no president has overseen more federal excuses than president trump. pete williams is reporting on this story. help us understand this shift in policy. what were the major factors at play and what happens next. >> i think it is based on a number of conditions. one is the fairness of it and given the number of exonerations in capital indications. people on death row later not to be found responsible. that is one reason to question the executions themselves. another is the change in the way that the government carried them out. it used to be they were done by a combination of three drugs.
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when william barr ordered them to resume, they said let's just use a single drug. the second part of this is garland asking the justice department if that makes sense, is that fair, is that humane. so it is based partly on policy and policy considerations and partly on how they should be done. a couple things about this is number one it is a moratorium on carrying out people already convicted. and the reason that moratorium, that that hiatus existed is because of legal challenges and the fact that one of them was very hard for the government to get. but this doesn't say anything about seeming seeking the death
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penalty. he was given the death sentence saying the jury was not properly instructed and they will hear that case next term. >> our justice correspondent, pete williams, on a friday morning for us, thanks as always, sir. >> we're following more breaking news. a boeing 737 cargo plane had to make an emergency landing after engine trouble. they reported engine trouble and reattempting to return to honolulu when they were forced to land the aircraft in the water. the faa and the national transportation safety board will investigate. we'll update you more. we're also keeping an eye on
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surfside, florida, where we expect officials to give a update a few hours from now. the desperate recovery work under way after the pause to make sure it was safe for those first responders. first, why would a business keep two sets of books or pay tuition for an executive's grandson? those are some of the questions that allen weisselberg will have to answer after he bread not guilty to a whole bunch of final crimes. why there is no legal defense for the charges. e charges. ♪♪ i thought i was managing my moderate to severe crohn's disease. then i realized something was missing...
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closely for us. tom, let me start with you. us us through the charges and what is going on. >> basically saying look, there was a series of off the books compensation agreements that occurred or packages that occurred that were offered here that were not properly accounted for and it has to do with issues of not paying proper taxes. a company could do that and be above the board, but people have to account for it in their
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filings. they can't say that one hand didn't know what other hand was doing. they took care of himself, and it is particularly strong. far the what is next here this is a nonviolent crime in new york. there is a very high bar for some to get a high bail or to not have bail awaiting trial. so weisselberg is not even out on his own. that just is ets a motion schedule so a trial date has not even been set here yet. it appears in this point in this particular case to be a long way away. >> as a former krups and fraud
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prosecutor. >>ly repeat what you said. it is pretty audacious here. this indictment is very detailed. very, very detailed, and they went through that detail of the evidence they have to signal in my view to the defendant and the trump organization that they have to prove they have a very strong case here. i think these are very serious charges they carry potentially very serious jail time for mr. weisselberg. this is a real case with real money and real potential jail time. >> tell me about the evidence, are we talking about documents here or more to it than that? >> this is more than just a
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document. there are witnesses here. it has been reported that is ex-daughter-in-law has gone to the grand jury. manage i found very importance here is that there was an unindicted co-conspirator. there was someone not named yet. >> one of the lawyers from the trump organization said that after years and investigation and the collection of millions of documents and devoting resources of dozens of prosecutors this is all they have in? my 50 years of practice i have never seen the office bring a
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case like this and quite frankly i'm astonished. that is coming from a attorney for the trump organization. what do you say to that? is this unprecedented on some level? >> i don't think so. and you know the defense attorneys are doing their jobs, right? it is a plane that is crashing down down now they brought a bigot fraught case. particular types of charges where he cheated on his taxes. they should be charged, we're all victims of tax fraud. >> thank you both this morning the boy scouts of america reached an $850 million million
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settlement with sexual abuse survivors. it is now the largest case in u.s. history. last year they filed for brums as they faced their mounting legal costs. if you're about to hit the road for the weekend, be ready to spend more on gas. first, live to surfside, florida where officials are expected to update us any minute now. where the efforts stand at this hour. how families and neighbors are just trying to cope half a heartbreaking week. >> you see loved ones, even though i don't know them they
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working relentlessly. it is emotionally draining. they were able to identify a child whose father worked for the city of miami fire department. and these are tough things for them. we focus on the families and rightfully so, but our families have gone through a lot out there and i think that added sort really means a lot. so i just wanted to thank the folks that i met. i want to thank the president for supporting a 100% reimbursement for things like debris remoe value. it can be very expensive. so he was very, very supportive doing a 30-day reimbursement and that will be very helpful to all
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levels of government here in florida. as many of you know tropical storm elsa is now hurricane elsa. we're working, i ordered our department of emergency management to start preparing a potential state of emergency. i will be working on that today. if we do do the checktive order that will asis our team in preparations. we don't know exactly the track that it will take. it is possible that we could see tropical force winds as early as sunday night in southern florida. so we're actively monitoring the situation like we always do. but given what we're doing on this site we're also paying special attention to what could happen here.
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it is noobl this area could see tropical storm force winds. not guaranteed, but it is possible, so our department is assuming that will happen and making the necessary preparations to protect the equipment. so we are going like we normally would with these things, but we're adding a special emphasis because we understand the sensitivities involved. the further west this tracks the less like i there will be impacts here. but it will like will be stronger into mexico. the more likely it would be to slow it down, but there will be some impacts in florida at some point starting as early as
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sunday night. we'll be working on that and working on this. doing both on a dual track. the storm doing what we normally do. but a anything that needs to be done and protected, thank you. >> thank you. >> thank you, and now for spanish remarks. >> all right, we have been listening to governor ron desantis here. alison barber here, she has been covering the story from the beginning. alison give us a update, if you can, on where it all stands
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right now. you heard the governor talking about el is a now. strong winds, tropical storm like winds. they were talking about how they were monitoring el is a. they felt like they would be okay through saturday. the big concern is this strategy here. the rescue efforts under way today but they were stopped yesterday for 16 hours because of concerns that the building, the remaining part of the building that it could collapse. there is apparently a large column that shifted six to 12 inches. firefighters on the scene going about their scene and search efforts felt heavy movement. there is some talk about the possibility of demolishing what
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remains so search efforts are not impeded again. is is unlikely that something like that could happen. we know at least 145 people are unaccounted for and this seems to be kind of the next big obstacle for the efforts here. we expect to get a update on whether or not any additional victims have been recovered. but the latest update we had was that there have been at least 18 lives lost in the collapse of this building. over 145 people still unaccounted for, craig? >> alison, the 145 folks that you mentioned that were still unaccounted for, their families i know they have been getting regular briefings there, are they still holding out hope?
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>> yeah, they typically get about two briefings every single day. and i might send it back to you, i think we might want to listen. >> yeah, let's listen. still, struggling to know about the results, with their own family members, and i can tell you that following yesterday's visit by president biden, meeting for three hours, and the sense today that there is more relief, assurance, and comfort. his role as assurer and chief is very important and he does it better than anyone else. i want to announce his proactive announcement that the forecast government would provide 100%
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reimbursement for the last 30 days. i started to talk about that with the impact on the budget knowing those costs will be taken care of 100% in the first 30 days of this crisis is really important and it takes a load off of our governments here that are responding. i want to emphasize that with the potential onset of the hurricane, we are taking a whole government approach to this. we always take a whole government approach to when a hurricane will hit our shores. so making sure that you're ready and that you're prepared for a hurricane. the hurricane possibly coming now. and make sure you have seven days of supplies at your house. make sure you have a plan to keep yourself safe if it does come closer.
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as time goes on, we have bureaucracy start to set in. the mobile office hours that i have at the family assistance center and talking with other families yesterday, some are starting to feel concerned, they're staying in hotels, their time will run out, and they want to know how can they get access to federal relief. if they're not citizens and they don't have a u.s. citizen child, where do hay go for charity able relief. anyone that needs access to individual assistance or from the charities working to assist families do so at the family assistance center. it has been impacted by the collapse to go to the family assistance center. make sure that you register with
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fema which you can also do at the family assistance center. i have staff on the ground to help cut through any of the red tape. thank you so much. >> thank you, congresswoman. >> here we are day nine. yesterday evening just before 5:00 p.m. the search and rescue mission was able to resume operations. our first responders have been hard at work as they have been this entire time continuing to serge through the pile that is access tobl them. last night we did discover two additional victims. tragically one of those victims was a 7-year-old daughter of a
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city of miami firefighter. and it goes without saying that every night since this last wednesday has been immensely difficult for everybody, particularly the families impacted. last night was truly different for the first responders. these men and women are paying an enormous human toll each and every day and i ask that all of you please keep all of them into your tlougts and prayers. they are the best of all of us. with these developments last night, we sflou contacted, we have now confirmed 20 deaths.
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188 people are accounted for128 accounted for. the number of accounted for people have increased and that is good news nap is one of the reasons that it has increased is that in some cases in which we originally received a report of a potentially missing person, that report was was only marked at one person, but when the detectives were able to reach and verify the safety of the american in question we discovered there are in fact several family members that could have been counted for, potentially in the building and now we can mark them as safe. this is very very good news nap is 188 people accounted for. our detectives are continually
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cop ducted an conducted an ongoing audit. the numbers are fluid and you can understand why. our engineers and our miami-dade fire team have continues to evaluate the site as they work to expand the area as quickly as possible as as it becomes safe to do so. we're proceeding with our evaluation of all of the factors all of the time and the impacts related to the demolition of the building. while the search and rescue continues as our top priority. and it is important to stress as our engineer explained yesterday evening, that a demolition cannot be done overnight. in fact it takes weeks to demolish a building. we continue to aggressively monitor what is now hurricane el
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elsa. we could feel sustained tropical storm force winds as early as sunday midday. we'll be joined by our weather service and our department incident commander, our our emergency management director to provide more detail on our preparedness for the site and our storm prep for the entire community. so please stay tuned. i want to once again remind everybody here that hurricane season is very much upon us and it is important to make sure that you have a plan in place and that you take key precautions at home. everyone must prepare now for the eventuality of a storm. the collaboration between miami-dade, the state of florida, the city of surfside, and all of our local partners is truly unprecedented.
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it is truly unprecedented and we know the world is watching. this is the largest non-hurricane mobilization of resources in the history of our state and it would not be possible without the commitment of everybody on the ground. let's please all continue to keep the victims, their families, our first responders in your thoughts and prayers. thank you and god bless. [ speaking spanish ] >> the mayor of miami-dade there. the death toll has prisonen to 20 now.
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they are able to locate a few of the folks previously considered unaccounted for. but 20 dead so far. 28 update continues in surfside, florida. nbc's allison barber on the ground there in surfside, as well and we heard the mayor, allison, toward the end also talk a little bit about the other big story that's developing off the coast of florida. there is a hurricane that could complicate the efforts there now, as well. >>. >> yeah. there has been, you heard her talk about can they just get rid of this remaining structure prior to concerns about this hurricane a driving, but just concerns about it potentially falling and injuring workers who are there trying to save lives and/or just further delaying their efforts which we saw happen yesterday when there was
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a roughly 16-hour delay due to structural concerns. it's an idea that they are considering and they're looking for plans and a possibility of doing that, but they have been told that that is not something that could happen quickly, that it would take weeks. heading into the hurricane, that's not necessarily a solution here, but the biggest concern when it relates to this weather coming in is what it means for rescue efforts. there are still hundreds of people unaccounted for. there are still families waiting for answers and whether that is an answer to say it is a miracle to say someone is alive or just having their loved one back home, that last delay yesterday was a devastating blow to these families. no one wants to see rescue efforts stop again. the only time they stopped rescue efforts despite the bad weather we've seen the last week or so was if there was a lot of lightning. they worked through the rain, but obviously if a hurricane is approaching that would sort of -- that would obviously change everything, craig.
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>> allison barber there in surfside, florida. again, as officials to update, also, of course, the news revealed a few moments ago that a 7-year-old girl, the daughter of a firefighter there in miami among those victims recovered overnight. we'll continue to monitor the situation there in surfside, florida, and we will be right back. oh! are you using liberty mutual's coverage customizer tool? sorry? well, since you asked. it finds discounts and policy recommendations, so you only pay for what you need. limu, you're an animal! who's got the bird legs now? only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ uno, dos, tres, cuatro!
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[sfx]: typing [music starts] [sfx]: happy screaming [music ends] well, vacation season is back with a vengeance, apparently. aaa expects this weekend to be the second busiest july 4th travel weekend of all time, but the nearly 48 million travelers are likely to encounter one of two potential hurdles. the highest gas prices since 2014 or the dangerous covid delta variant which has now
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spread to all 50 states. yasmin vossoughian is at a gas station in new york. she's talking to travelers there. take us through what these high prices are going to mean for folks and what drivers can do, perhaps to save a few bucks on those weekend road trips? >> reporter: yeah. there are a lot of weekend road trips happening across the country and it's a confluence of things as to why it happened. opec limits on exports and there was a shortage of truck drivers and delivering the gas to some of these stations and then it's a supply and demand issue. they didn't anticipate there would be such a demand for crude oil, hence the reason why we're seeing such high gas prices across the country. the national average, craig $3.09, the highest it's been in the last seven years. you talk about the 48 million number. 98% of those travelers are on the road.
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90%. so many of them driving by behind me. i got to talk to folks trying to anticipate the roads ahead, the traffic ahead. here's what they had to say. >> to beat the traffic. i know i'm going to hit some going this way, but any chance -- i would rather sit in traffic at 7:00 a.m. than 10:00 p.m. >> i think there are a lot more people out. i think people are excited that things have opened up more. there are more things to do and it will be a big fourth of july weekend everywhere, east end e everywhere, there will be a lot of people out, party scene and traffic picking up all over the place. >> and craig, that's really much of what i've heard as i've been speaking to folks this morning is we have been on lockdown for the last year and a half. this time last year fourth of july folks weren't able to celebrate, come out and watch the fireworks. this time, people want to get it in. they want to get it done and trying to anticipate the
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gridlock on the roadways. my advice would be take the train. if you can, take the train and get out as early as possible and if you're wondering, when should i start? go, get up and go. and use some of those apps to navigate where you're going and of course, some of the prices differ between states in new york and it is more expensive to get gas than it is in new jersey and that's part of the plan that you should take into account as you head out into the roadways, craig? >> yasmin vossoughian. be sure to watch yasmin on weekends from 3:00 to 5:00 pchl m. eastern only on msnbc. i'll see you back on monday. "andrea mitchell reports" starts next. i don't know. i think they look good, man. mm, smooth. uh, they are a little tight. like, too tight?
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wright brothers? more like, yeah right, brothers! get outta here! it's not crazy. it's a scramble. just crack an egg. ♪♪ ♪♪ good day. this is "andrea mitchell reports" in washington, as the massive search and rescue operation in surfside condo rubble resumes in full force is now threatened by a hurricane barreling toward the close. florida officials are closely monitoring to make sure the remaining structure is safe enough to continue looking for the 128 people that they now say are still unaccounted for. 188 people have been accounted for. as the city has been able to reach more people alive to find more survivors, but the death toll has risen
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