tv Stephanie Ruhle Reports MSNBC July 12, 2021 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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left. it was radical trumpists who again are willfully ignorant now and just don't want to know the truth because it is inconvenient to them to believe that their man got beaten by joe biden. something donald trump still can't come to terms with. >> that does it for us. stephanie ruhle picks up coverage right now. hi there. i am stephanie ruhle. it is monday, july 12th. great to be back this morning as we have a lot to cover. the commander of u.s. and nato forces in afghanistan is officially stepping down. we go live to kabul for the latest. in washington, president biden will address rising gun violence taking place when he meets with a group of law enforcement officials and local government leaders, including new york city mayoral candidate eric adams who
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put crime at the center of his campaign. and yesterday, a historic flight. billionaire richard branson reaching the edge of space in a test flight aboard virgin galactic space ship, hoping to send tourists there next. and unrest in cuba. thousands of protesters take to the streets in the biggest anti-government demonstrations the country has seen in decades. but we have to start this morning with growing concerns about covid-19. yes, this is is not gone. a new increase in hospitalizations and cases blamed on rapidly spreading delta variant. seven day average for new infections up 16% nationwide, and hospitalizations have jumped more than 8%. in los angeles alone, health officials reporting an alarming 165% surge in cases over the last week. in 14 states, less than 40% of residents are fully vaccinated,
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with alabama, mississippi, arkansas ranking lowest. representatives from pfizer are set to brief the top health officials about what they say is the need for a booster shot, specifically targeting the delta variant, which makes up more than half the country's new covid infections. thus far, the cdc says there's no evidence americans should get a third shot. we are in luck. i have the best team to breakdown the latest developments. steve patterson in las vegas, nevada, where covid is an absolute monster. and dr. peter hotez. steve, nevada has the highest covid rate in the country and among the lowest for vaccinations. as i am talking through this, i am thinking back to the connor magregor fight.
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what is going on with americans, vaccines are available. >> reporter: you see health officials are begging people to get vaccinated. it pushed every metric from positivity rate to case count to hospitalizations which are at levels we have not seen since mid february. the most mind numbing thing is that they say it doesn't have to be this way. they looked at the metrics. they've seen that 95% of the current people in the hospital for covid in the past few weeks have been there unvaccinated. we have seen the vaccination rate in far lower than it should be, 43%. far worse in communities like las vegas, communities that surround the strip, often with hospitality workers working on the strip. there we found a community over the weekend 25% vaccinated. another one 30% vaccinated, where they were holding a vaccination drive at a local apartment complex, very underserved community, the trend
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seemed to be limited access to health care, therefore rampant misinformation. we spoke to the organizer about that. here's what he told us. >> extremely dangerous. that's why we are trying to get more and more into these areas, try to encourage people to be vaccinated. the challenge is when you work in a lot of communities, people don't take news or information from media sources, electronic sources. most effective way to deal with it is word of mouth. >> reporter: the hope is to put a federal surge team on the ground this week to help with immunizations. stephanie? >> peter, from misinformation to mixed messaging, pfizer who creates the vaccine who obviously is a business that benefits from more people getting vaccinated, they're now pushing for a booster. the cdc says the booster isn't needed. help us understand this. mixed messaging hurts absolutely
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everyone. what does the science tell us? >> you're absolutely right, stephanie. we have been talking all in 2021 that a third immunization is likely going to be necessary. that will build in more resilience to variants, rev up virus neutralizing antibody, and the fact we're not vaccinating the world means we will be besieged by variants. it doesn't surprise me we will need a third immunization. the piece is that we don't need one for delta variant. they've done well in terms of providing protection from delta variant, that's why we hear cases and deaths, more than 95% are among unvaccinated individuals.
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one important exception is people who are immuno suppressive therapy, may benefit from third immunization. i think we need to sort it out. there's going to be discussion between leaders of health and human services and pfizer to sort it out. when publicly available data, we don't need it for the delta variant unless they have specific information that none of us have seen, which is quite possible. bottom line is yes, we need a third immunization. number of us have been saying that for a number of months. i don't necessarily think we need it now unless pfizer can produce information that tells us otherwise. >> peter, cases are up 16% across the nation but deaths are down 25%. is that telling us people in the highest risk categories are vaccinated, which is good news, those that are getting sick are maybe younger people not going to get very sick?
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>> sort of. so you're right. this phase of the epidemic has a different flavor. so many older americans are vaccinated, but so many young adults, adolescents are not in the south. many states in the south, fewer than 20% of adolescents are vaccinated, low percentage of young adults. and part of the reason is the disinformation, a lot of it from the far right, is saying that covid-19 is benign in younger individuals, and they cite low death rates. the piece they omit is between 10 and 30% of the individuals get long haul covid with disabling neurologic effects. now we have seen from oxford university a degeneration of gray matter, we are going to wind up disabling a generation
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of young americans because of that disinformation. >> and how about we can choose to have americans not get sick at all. you can choose to get vaccinated. peter, one more question. this one blew my mind. the cdc officially saying schools should prioritize in person learning this fall. yeah, of course. we absolutely should and need to be back in school in person. there should be no scenario where we're not. >> well, certainly in massachusetts and vermont, yeah, we can do it safely because all of the adults and adolescents are vaccinated. the hard thing to figure out is how we do this say in louisiana or mississippi where fewer than 20% of adolescents are vaccinated, low percentage of young adults. there's going to be potentially a lot of transmission from the delta variant. we still have a few more weeks before the school year starts. i am quite concerned. >> peter, hold on.
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people in those states are choosing not to be vaccinated and those same people are expecting and demanding in person learning. >> they want it both ways. i am the parent of four kids. nobody understands it better than my wife and i. we also have to be realizing there was a lot of transmission, and have a frank discussion how to fix this and continue to work as hard as we can in terms of vaccinating kids, teachers, staff. that has to be the big priority. the biden administration is aware of it, trying to figure it out. when you have a segment of the country deeply defiant of vaccines, believing statements by congressman greene that this is used as a method of power and control and others saying they're using it to take our
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guns and bibles, it is tough to combat, but we have to keep trying. >> you want to open the country, go back to work, back to businesses, get vaccinated. thank you both so much. we have breaking news out of afghanistan. the pictures on the screen now, live pictures, the commander of u.s. and nato forces is officially stepping down in a ceremony getting under way as we speak. this is symbolic to 20 years of military operations in afghanistan. joining us, david rhodes, received a pulitzer prize for reporting in afghanistan. i cannot think of someone that knows the region from reporting better than you. we have been talking awhile about troops leaving. why is this moment so significant in terms of actually ending the war?
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>> it is significant. part of a rapid american -- there are a few hundred left and to be honest, draw down has been fast, it is panicking afghan security forces. i am biased, i have close friends, translators that work with me, trying to get out of afghanistan and they're panicked. they feel, one of them said they expected this from the trump administration but not from a biden administration. >> then what happens to all those people, those translators, those that worked with u.s. troops, are they safe there? >> no, they're not. and there is an effort to get translators out that worked for u.s. troops. in iraq, there was effort to get
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at -- also worked with american journalists in iraq. that's not happening in afghanistan. there's one group, tens of thousands of translators that work for afghan military, on top of the list, hopefully they'll get out. tens of thousands of afghan men that believed in the american effort, two of my friends that worked with me, one was kidnapped by the taliban, enormous delays to get interviews, to get american visas or to get any to any country out of afghanistan. they're in a dire situation now. >> here's what's most confusing and concerning for me. the whole reason we went into afghanistan 20 years ago was because the taliban was in control and harboring terrorists like osama bin laden. look at the map. we haven't pulled everyone out yet and the taliban is already
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back in control of more than a third of the populated areas and contesting another third. so what is going to stop them from turning afghanistan 2021 into afghanistan 2001. >> there isn't much. we had allies we worked with on the ground. i think we lost militarily. primary reason we lost -- safe haven inside pakistan, a key reason we lost. [ audio problems ] i agree that this military mission has failed, but i think there's a choice whether to leave 2500 troops. we had troops deployed in south korea and germany for a decade.
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to prevent isis. there's a rush withdrawal. there's a possibility we will be back soon. >> you want to make this withdrawal safe for as many people as possible. david, thank you so much for joining us. i appreciate it. before we turn to break. i want to turn to the latest in surfside, florida. the death toll has officially reached 90. 31 people are still missing as crews continue to search the rubble. police released identities of ten additional victims, including three children, 5, 6, 9 years old. officials are expected to give an update in the next hour as today marks day 19 of search efforts. coming up, richard branson kicking off a new kind of space race. how soon could we see tourists taking a ride into space. after a marathon of public
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testimony over the weekend, the texas legislature is on the verge of passing restrictive voting bills. we take you live to the state's capital with a look at what, if anything, democrats can do to stop it. k at what, if anything, democrats can do to stop it. ♪ nothing and me go hand in hand nothing on my skin, ♪ ♪ that's my new plan. ♪ ♪ nothing is everything. ♪ achieve clearer skin with skyrizi. 3 out of 4 people achieved 90% clearer skin at 4 months. of those, nearly 9 out of 10 sustained it through 1 year. and skyrizi is 4 doses a year, after 2 starter doses. ♪ i see nothing in a different way it's my moment ♪ ♪ so i just gotta say... ♪ ♪ nothing is everything. ♪ skyrizi may increase your risk of infections and lower your ability to fight them. before treatment, your doctor should check you for infections and tuberculosis. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms such as fevers, sweats, chills, muscle aches, or coughs or if you plan to or recently received a vaccine. ♪ nothing is everything. ♪
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space tourism is one step closer to becoming the norm after history was made when sir richard branson won the billionaire space race with virgin galactic, launching him and five others from a remote desert in new mexico to the edge of outer space. >> if we can do this, imagine what you can do. i was once a child with a dream, looking up to the stars. now i'm an adult in a space ship with lots of other wonderful adults looking down to our beautiful, beautiful earth.
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>> tom costello was there for the launch and joins us from new mexico. great honor to now dr. jenison, one of the first women of color in space. tom, you were there yesterday, had a front row seat. it is not a surprise to see someone like richard branson trying to break records by land and air for years and years. broughter than that. was yesterday the unofficial start for all of us, space tourism part of our lives? >> look at the headlines, they're talking about the dawn of the new space age, making exactly that point. and they put a lot of money on it in new mexico. spaceport that branson took off from is a $250 million facility built by new mexico. they believe this is the future.
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they believe you're going to see a lot of people, hundreds of people in coming years take off from the spaceport. it is not just richard branson, it is for any operator that wants to go in space and a perfect location. you have no conflict with air traffic control and great weather. for state of new mexico, they think it is worth a billion dollars in terms of tax revenue, for last crews as, half million from this launch. so many come in for the race, for the liftoff. we stayed in hotels. how soon will tickets come down. it is now $250,000, going up a bit according to branson. he would like it to come down. his hope and jeff bezos' hope who takes off july 20th, they hope as more go into space on passenger flights, as they have more space ships, branson has
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the blue origin ship, we have several ships with virgin, that will bring the price town for -- down for you, me, and everybody else. >> you know the science and technology. pi this moment in context. it is exciting. how big a deal is it? [ no audio ] >> i think it is a big deal. it is interesting for me around the engineering, not just the engineering but the fact that you took off in a different methodology. i think those things are interesting, the hybrid structure of the engines. and there are multiple vehicles,
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looking how to reuse it, took off and land it from the same place. those are exciting. and tourism, the fact that people get to go with private industry is also just a very new twist. put this in perspective. i think space tourism started back when russia was taking people to the international space station paying $25 million. it has been around awhile. the difference is you don't have to go through a government agency. these things are building. i am really excited about it because it does herald a new era. but i am careful about the term new space age, new space race. i think we have to actually understand this is building upon so much work that has been done before that u.s. taxpayers paid for, that others paid for and research, and space isn't only about people who physically go there, the astronauts.
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there's thousands of people behind getting the launch made, getting vehicles prepared. those are the things we need to understand. how do we use that. it is a synergistic effect. >> doctor, can you help us understand the difference between two missions in terms of timing. richard branson won the space race, he was up there first. talk about how different bezos' mission will be a week from now? >> there are two different vehicles. one vehicle launches like they see a rocket, blue origin has a different size and capsule. my understanding is that you have about the same time and weightlessness. neither of these vehicles goes in orbit around the earth, they do a big -- go up like a roller coaster, come down. at the top you have about three
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to four minutes of weightlessness. that's the difference. but i believe blue origin is work on getting other vehicles that can go further in space, i'm sure that's also the case with virgin. those are the difference between the vehicles. i think the process now is to understand who gets to go, how much does it cost. you talk about space and demock kraitization of space, how much is it when the vast majority of us could not afford to go. >> tom, from a branding perspective in the very, very high end universe of space tourism, team bezos is arguing richard branson didn't actually make it to space, we're going
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higher. does that matter? when the world looked up at the first private launch, the only thing we saw were words virgin galactic. >> i think you're right. i don't think it matters. honestly, i think bezos and blue origin team took such backlash for comment on friday suggesting branson isn't going high enough, they're not really astronauts. there was such backlash that you saw yesterday bezos come out, congratulate branson, say he hopes to soon join the club. in other words, yes, you made it to space. but listen, there are bragging rights involved and nobody is a better show man than richard branson. he perfected this over 50 years. and everything yesterday was meticulously perfectly done. bezos is going to have his chance, bite at the apple next week. clearly they want to put on a show. branson set the bar high. and you're right, it is about
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branding, attracting future customers, and hopefully the more the merrier, you bring down the price. >> had breakfast with elon musk. an orchestrated event and he pulled it off. dr. mae, tom, appreciate you joining me. i have to turn to a different extreme. this one extreme weather taking place out west. the heat wave is continuing over the weekend and shattering records. california's death valley, are you ready for this, reaching 130 degrees, one of the highest temperatures ever recorded on planet earth. palm springs and vegas reached record highs. the region battling wildfires with 300 acres burning across six different states. officials are trying to contain the fires and urging residents to reduce power use. coming up next. a tip from concerned worker leads to police discovering an
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officials are worried it could have been part of a plot aimed against the all-star game happening a block way at coors field. the fbi says there's no official evidence of that. at the same time, actual shootings were taking place across the country, including scores of people shot in philly and chicago, and 13-year-old child killed in new york. according to archive, 128 were killed with guns in the last three days. just a few hours from now, president biden is addressing this in a gathering with top officials, including the attorney general and local leaders like the new york mayoral candidate to talk about bringing numbers down immediately. i want to bring in nbc correspondent michael member lee and cedric alexander, who was police chief and member of the task force on 21st century
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policing. tell us more about the meeting. i don't know how much he can actually do. >> reporter: that's right. this is a white house closely monitoring the spike in violent crime, not just focused on what it means for residents but aware of what the republicans are doing in terms of making this a political issue. that's why ahead of the issue you have senior white house officials issue a memo to local leaders highlighting core aspects of the crime prevention strategy. it is about framing it as a gun violence issue. he wants to take it through executive actions, crackdown on rogue gun dealers. those that aren't enforcing existing gun control laws. focusing on community prevention to take people off the streets in summer months. the other thing this memo does,
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core part of the message is funding police. the memo goes on to highlight specific examples in a half dozen cities in which they used covid relief money to add or seek to retain law enforcement officers on the books, do other things on those lines. interesting the guest list for the meeting today includes local police chiefs from newark, new jersey where they have been able to reduce violent crime without firing a single bullet. you have newly nominated democratic candidate for mayor of new york who ran against the grain of defunding police, prevalent in the democratic party in the past year or so. zblr as michael said, this will focus on funding kmunltd policing, rolling out youth employment programs, these are good big picture. but we're in crisis now. our country is on track to see the deadliest year of gun
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violence in decades. if i'm a mom in a high risk city, telling me you're going to roll out a youth program is great two years from now. what are you doing today, tomorrow, two days from now, when i am scared to leave the house. >> good morning. first of all, say good morning, stephanie. that's a paramount question you're asking. to be perfectly honest, i think what president biden will present today is certainly needed. it is a step in the right direction. i want to be clear about that. i think what is clearly important, and you're right, what are we going to do here and now. we see spikes in crime, not just in major cities but moderate, small communities as well. it is certainly a major concern. i think any support that we can get from the federal government, from state government, local law enforcement, they all work
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together is paramount in the present, but we have to be clear about what it is we want them to do at this very moment. certainly we had to go back. we have tools that worked in the past, we have seen spikes before. there are certainly things we can do, target certain individuals and neighborhoods, we have to take a look at bail reform in the state of new york because a lot of bad people are being released back on the street now more than ever, and any police chief across the country will tell you that. it becomes paramount for all of us and communities even have a responsibility to speak up as police try to do something different in this crisis that we are in. and we are in a crisis across the country relates to violent crimes. as you notice, there are numbers put up every week that are beyond our beliefs, in major cities across the country. we cannot continue to lay back
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and allow that to happen. it is all hands on deck. the federal government is important but we have to do better than we are doing now. >> people in those cities believe it, they're living it. their hands are tied. we need more laws. why aren't we doing things we can, in terms of going after illegal gun dealers. >> they're putting everything they have at this very moment on the streets. unfortunate, these spikes which are probably significant in the sense that if we look at prior covid, we saw the numbers begin to go up. and during 2020 during covid, we also saw kids out of school, people unemployed. and here's what's really
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important to all of this. we got paramount social issues still to address, housing, unemployment, poor health, poor education, et cetera, et cetera. that drives a lot of this. we can talk about guns but understand we live in gun culture. there are guns all over the place. we can set aside new laws, old laws, but accessibility of guns in this country is a huge problem and in many states where you have the availability of guns without a permit, whether sold in a gun store or not, gunshots can't be totally responsible for this, you have legal gun shops operating under their state and federal laws, but the accessibility through a lot of other avenues, stolen weapons, unsecured weapons, weapons passed from continuous state with weak gun laws as
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opposed to one that may have strong gun laws. until we address issues very specific, we're going to continue to see what we're seeing in this country, so we can talk around it, but we have to go to the core of this issue, but here in the here and now, american people, mothers and fathers, i don't care what community you live in are threat for harm and injury. and it becomes important that for all of us at a local level because that's where the real change is going to take place, at a local level, connecting with police, community policing is hugely important, communities having a voice to say something when they see something is huge, and we have to continue to look at what worked in the past because we're in a very serious place now in america. >> it ain't working now. jake, what can the president do. can he do much or is this in the
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hands of congress who won't play ball? >> the president can't do much of anything and i don't mean that in a flippant way. i am not meaning to minimize this day. as the chief and mike alluded to in some way, shape or form, the last, for the last 15 years or more we've had this huge gun violence. we all know that. last two democratic administrations chiefly barack obama took a host of executive actions when it came to gun control. a lot of democrats feel, i can tell you this, i hear it all the time, democrats feel the administration has done all that it can to stop gun violence and the only thing left to do is for congress to act in some way, shape or form. what we have also seen, we've seen congress wrestle with this for 15 years, try to get a deal, have not been able to get a deal. most people understand this is
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very much like immigration in many respects, most people understand what an eventual compromise would look like, but neither side has the political will, chiefly republicans that stood against this time and time again, don't believe new gun laws are needed. talks between john cornyn of texas and chris murphy of connecticut collapsed. democrats haven't put a gun bill on the floor of the senate yet. we haven't seen what the vote would look like if democrats put them on the spot. congress unwilling to act, democrats believe the administration has done all it can the last two democratic administrations, so this is where we are. >> to the lawmakers unwilling to act, tell that to the mother of a 13-year-old who died this weekend in new york because of gun violence. thank you all so much. i appreciate you joining me this morning. going to leave it there. we have to acknowledge, italy, italian fans all over the world are reeling. i doubt they went to bed through
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an exciting win. beating england to win the european soccer championship after england scored two minutes into the game, italy tied it up and all eventually came down to penalty kicks. the country making a massive come back after not even qualifying for the 2018 world cup. and we know 2020 was a devastating year for italy as a whole. a win that country needed. coming up next, an effort to restrict voting rights in the state of texas is under way. former texas senator that delayed a previous push on abortion legislation, wendy davis, joins us on how democrats can try not to just talk about it but do something to stop the bills. but can they, do they have the power? ey, do they have the power? they're made by them. thinkorswim trading. from td ameritrade.
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state of texas where republicans are set to push through two restrictive voting bills that could overhaul the state's election process. it comes after nearly 24 hours of debate in the statehouse over the weekend. now state democrats are thinking about staging another walkout like the one they had in may. on top of all this, a 62-year-old man who waited six hours to vote in texas on super tuesday, he got arrested last week for voter fraud because he was on parole when he voted. priscilla thompson is on the ground in austin, and also, former senator wendy davis. priscilla, give us the nuts and bolts. what's the latest? >> reporter: well, steph, hundreds of people turned out for the public testimony in the house and senate over the weekend. the majority of the folks speaking in opposition to the bills. the testimony went into the early hours of sunday morning and one of the names that came
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up during some of the debate is the man you mentioned, hervis rogers, last in line at texas southern university on super tuesday to cast his ballot. on last wednesday, the day before the special session began, he was arrested for voter fraud. he was on parole at the time he voted and therefore he was ineligible. he didn't know he was ineligible. he thought it was okay to cast a ballot. why this is important, in another way, bail was set at $100,000. there was a go fund me working to raise that money. so as public hearings were taking place saturday, he was ultimately released on bail, but he knew faces two felony charges for voting illegally, looking at 25 years to life on each of those counts. steph, ultimately that case and that marathon public testimony
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did not have much impact. both were voted out of committee on party lines, could head to the floor for vote as early as this week. steph? >> 25 years to life for a guy who waited six hours in line just to vote. wendy, when you were in the statehouse, you staged a 13 hour filibuster to block abortion restrictions. here's the thing. in the end, it still passed. we saw democrats have a walkout in may, they're talking about it again. it makes a lot of noise but it doesn't change outcomes and basically the supreme court has green lit the bills. at this point is there anything democrats can do? >> yes and no, stephanie. i've always been of the opinion we fight with every tool we have in the arsenal, even if ultimately a bill passes into law. when i filibuster that anti-abortion bill in 2013 in the texas senate, though it did
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ultimately pass into law when a second special session was called, we kept fighting to the supreme court and did get it overturned. and i believe and i know a number of democrats in the texas statehouse and texas state senate now believe that fighting with everything they've got, including the possibility of walking out again, possibly leaving the state in order to keep voter suppression bills from passing awareness, and, hopefully, delaying the ultimate passage of a bill like this, hoping, praying that at the federal level they are finally going to do something to protect voting rights in a state like texas. i'm so glad that you mentioned the case of mr. rogers because the bill that is before the texas house and senate right now actually looks to increase
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intimidation and voter suppression through increased criminal penalties for violating some of the new provisions that are being attempted to pass into law right now. >> and raising this public awareness could absolutely blow up in greg abbott's face. he is headed for reelection. for people from texas who are watching this, they may say, if this happens in my state i'm willing to wait in line six hours or 16 hours in the name of democracy. wendy, priscilla, thank you so much. we will leave it there. coming up, the president of cuba addressing the nation right now as cuba sees its biggest protest in deck az. we will bring you the latest next.
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right now we're following two major developing stories in the caribbean. the cuban president is addressing the nation this morning with a tv news conference following protests sunday that lasted about two-and-a-half hours over food shortages, high prices and daily blackouts as the island struggles to contain the coronavirus. witnesses tell "the washington post" cuban security personnel deployed tear gas to disburse the crowds with several protesters injured in the clashes. the other big story we're following, a haitian doctor with ties to florida has been arrested in connection to the assassination of the country's president. as fbi and homeland security officials arrive in haiti to help with the investigation.
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gabe gutierrez joins us with the latest on all of this. i have spent a lot of time in haiti. this is a country, an island plagued with conflict for years and years. haiti is asking the u.s. to send military. we have not done so yet. what is going on there? >> hi there, stephanie. the white house says there's no plans to send in the military, at least not yet. the fbi and dhs officials mets with the acting prime minister appointed two days before president moise's death. as you know several officials are jockeying for power right now in the country adding to the instability. you are looking apt video from this assassination last week that authorities have been investigating. in a late night news conference yesterday they announced new arrests. they say about 29, at least 29
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people were involved in this assassination attempt. 24 of them have either been arrested or killed. they just now announced the arrest of this haitian doctor living in florida, and he is now seen, according to authorities, as one of the intellectual authors of this attack. they say that he was even attempting to install himself as the country's president, some shocking allegations there. all of this as the country's first lady remains in a miami hospital recovering from several gunshot wounds. a very difficult situation in haiti and there are a lot of questions now about how this country moves forward, stephanie. >> those questions existed before this and now it is only worse. gabe, thank you so much. thank you for watching this very busy hour. i'm stephanie ruhle. hallie jackson picks up breaking news coverage on the other side of the break. the break with 20 grams of protein for muscle health. versus 16 grams in ensure high protein. boost® high protein also has key nutrients for immune support. boost® high protein.
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oh! are you using liberty mutual's coverage customizer tool? so you only pay for what you need. sorry? limu, you're an animal! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ as we come on the air, cuba in crisis. minutes ago the country's president delivering a speech to try to calm the people, blaming the united states for the protests that you are seeing on screen right now. more of them expected today after huge and very rare demonstrations this weekend, growing pressure for the white house to do or say something. why now and what's next? plus, here in washington the senate back in town with a summer crunch ahead of a key we,
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