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tv   Way Too Early  MSNBC  August 3, 2021 2:00am-3:00am PDT

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receive a review from a current or former employer before the state can process their cases. they're responsible for getting them out of a third country without u.s. assistance. we're going to continue to keep you updated on this important story. that does it for us tonight. we'll see you again tomorrow. "way too early" is up next. the united states finally reaches president biden's goal of having 70% of eligible adults at least partially vaccinated. but with cases still on the rise and discrepancies in vaccination rate ace among some states t question is how significant is this achievement? plus, senator lindsey graham tests positive for coronavirus despite being vaccinated. he's the first senator to disclose a breakthrough infection. the question circulate we see others? and it's the final day of women's gymnastics events at the tokyo olympics, and simone biles is making her return to the competition. the question circulate we see her win gold on the balance
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beam? it's way too erl too early for . good morning and welcome to "way too early," the show that is resolved to never step foot on a houseboat with a senator. i'm jonathan lemire on this tuesday, august 3rd. let's start with the news, and we'll begin with the biden administration, which is finally reaching its goal of getting 70% of american adults at least one dose of the covid vaccine. it's a milestone president biden had hoped to reach a month ago. as of yesterday, the cdc says more than 180.7 million people in the united states, ages 18 or older, have receive at least one shot. for those 12 years or older, less than 68% have received one dose. but covid cases are on the rise. hospitals are overwhelmed and health officials warn it's going to get worse before it gets
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better. nbc news miguel almaguer has more. >> reporter: as the crisis deepens at hospitals in hot spots the numbers are staggering and sobering, surpassing last summer's averages for new cases, our nation has recorded over 100,000 infections in a single day. the delta variant filling icus and killing more americans from week to week. >> if you get sick with the delta variability, we estimate that you could infect about five other unvaccinated people, more than twice as many as the original strain. >> reporter: though it comes nearly a month after the president's fourth of july goal, 70% of adults are at least partially vaccinated, but every day more breakthrough infections are being reported. senator lindsey graham, now in quarantine after announcing his infection says being fully vaccinated kept his covid symptoms from being far worse. >> even a high vaccine effectiveness, most of these infections are going to be
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asymptomatic or mild. >> reporter: some hospitals are already seeing a surge worse than before. a federal disaster team is arriving in louisiana. icu beds are short on supply, and a new face mask mandate for indoors is back in place. lines are stretching for hours in florida after the state just set its pandemic record for new cases and patients hospitalized. >> they're asking for the vaccine now. they're like, just give it to me. we want to get it. which now they have to wait unfortunately until they get better and get out of the hospital. >> reporter: hoping to boost inokay lags in new jersey, the governor says health care workers like those at nursing homes must be vaccinated or face weekly testing. new york is requiring businesses to require proof of vaccinations but not pushing for masks.
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hospitals lose americans every day. meanwhile in louisiana, a state with one of the lowest vaccination states, governor john bell is ordering mask mandates. the mandate will go for at least a month, but governor edwards is taking an extra precaution and says it could be extended as needed. >> nobody should be laboring under the misapprehension that this is just another surge. we've already had three of these. this is the worst one we've had thus far. >> meanwhile new york city mayor bill de blasio recommended yesterday vaccinated new yorkers should wear masks when indoor. the reversal of the previous mask guidance comes amid a massive rise in cases due to the delta variant. the mayor said, quote, it's a strong recommendation and not a
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mandate. newly hired workers will have to show proof of vaccinations before working. those who do not will not begin working. there's a sharp divide between democrats and republicans. in a new monmouth university poll taken before the announced guidelines last week, 52% said they would support the safety measures. while democrats were overwhelmingly in support of it, 85%, 73% of republicans said they wasn't. 63% said they were vaccinated. 31% of the republicans say they're still not likely to ever get the shot. a new report from the kaiser family foundation shows breakthrough cases, hospitalizations, and deaths are extremely rare among those who are fully vaccinated against covid-19. according to this report, those fully vaccinated showed an infection rate that is well below 1% in all reporting states. the rates of death among fully
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vaccinated people were effectively zero. joining us now, dr. uché blackstock. she is an msnbc contributor. thank you so much for being here. it seems the vaccination makes symptoms milder if one contracts covid, but it does not entirely prevent you from contracting the disease in the first place. tell us a little bit more how it protects people from -- reduces the risk of getting ittal all, but does this mean that because vaccinated people can still get it, should we go back to how we were living? things like social distancing and not overcrowding rooms? >> right. first of all, thank you for having me. i think the discussion around breakthrough infections has been quite confusing for the public. what people should know in terms of the endpoints for the clinical trials, really we're looking at severe disease,
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hospitalizations, and death. they're still effective at preventing all of those. in terms of breakthrough infections as you mentioned, there still is a very, very small risk that someone fully vaccinate cleveland get infected, and then we have some recent data they can possibly transmit the infection to others. still, very, very rear. the issue is not with the vaccines but the variant. we have widespread uncontrolled transmission of the virus not just in the u.s. but globally and that's causing variants to evolve. the delta variant is a thousand times more infectious, and one person can infect about five people compared to the wild type which only infected two people. . all that to say, there's so much variant around that we really should consider reinstating masks especially where caseloads are high. i do think that in areas where the surges are happening, where hospitals are at capacity, those areas should consider other
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restrictions. so that's increased testing, increased capacity restrictions, physical distancing should strongly be considered. we know all of those strategies are additive and quite effective. >> let's talk about schools. school is back in session in parts of the country soon, next couple of weeks, even some places in the northeast where it's after labor day. over the past year or so, we know schools go through precautions, windows open, kids in masks, other measures. what now with this delta variant? what now is the recommendation? we heard from president biden schools should be back in session this year, in person across the country. how do they do that? how does the delta variant change the equation as to how to safeguard students and teachers in these classrooms? >> right. as a parent of two small children the in the new york city public school system, i've
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been thinking about it for quite a while. the data that we have is that schools are not key drivers or have not been key drivers of the infection. however, if the community transmission levels are quite high, they can continue to spread. my concern is in states where governors, elected officials are restricting mask mandates, that could prove to be a very dangerous situation for schools we know that a multi-layered strategy in schools is very important. we know that masking, vaccination, testing is incredibly important, and i think that in those areas, especially in the south, we've already seen in mississippi, there have been outbreaks in schools, forcing school closures, and for parents in those areas, i would say to them they should probably have home testing supplies at home, make sure all the family members at home are fully vaccinated if the children cannot be, and to also ask their schools about testing and quarantine procedures to
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ensure safety for students. >> dr. uché blackstock, thank you for underscoring the idea that the schools are not heavy drivers of the virus. we certainly hope that continues. still ahead, the eviction moratorium has expired, and now the white house is scrambling to find a solution to keep millions of americans from being kicked out of their homes. plus, team usa gymnast won yechltd could simone biles do it today? those stories and more. we'll be right back. day? those stories and more we'll be right back.
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xfinity xfi so powerful, it keeps one-upping itself. can your internet do that? hey, it's the olympics. there's the flame. now, time for sports and the latest from tokyo. gymnast simone biles is back. she'll be on the balance beam this morning seeking individual
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gold in her return at the final event for the u.s. women after she pulled out of the previous five in tokyo. teammate suni lee is also competing as she looks to add to her individual all-around gold and her bronze on the uneven bars. it follows yesterday's floor routine win with jade carey. the usa men's basketball team took good with this morning's victory over spain. kerchlt durant scored 13 to help team usa to pull away after trailing by as many as ten. usa wins, 95-81. american record holder valarie allman took gold for the discus.
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american brittney reese secured her third olympic medal at her fourth around find games and team usa's rai benjamin won. american sara robles is now the first woman to win multiple medals. meanwhile on the sand, beach volleyball duo, ross and klineman are two wins away. they will face either brazil or switzerland in thursday's semifinal match. and in the pool this morning, arguably the most dominant u.s. team at the game, women's water polo is headed to the semifinals
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after beating continent rival canada. take that, canada. the last three world championships, the last world cups and last five pan american games, they are a dynasty. time now for the weather. and let's go to meteorologist janessa webb for the forecast. janessa, how's it looking out there? >> hey, jonathan, man. you had all good news there. i wish the weather was the same for portions of the southeast into the mid-atlantic. we're watching a pretty sloppy day across these areas with flash flood watches. they're now put in place across the florida panhandle to the carolinas. this rain has been consistent since yesterday. ite e going to continue today into early tomorrow. we're going to watch these flash flood watches with minor flooding across columbia, south carolina, into the raleigh-durham area. it's really across the coast that we're going to see major flooding. we could see up to 4 inches. it's all associated with this
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front that's sagging well to the south. you're probably noticing a lot cooler air. it's almost like a fall feel we have across the mid-atlantic all the way into the northeast even for areas of the deep south, and that's what's really steaming up at this rate. the front starts to push offshore, but the cooler air will definitely stay in place for most sections of the country of the east coast. also going to be watching the pacific northwest all the way down to albuquerque where we do have flash flood watches and monsoon moisture is a really big issue in this area. we're dealing with portions of tucson to flagflagstaff, seeing wettest july on record. a lot of moisture continues to be in place, but it's really not helping the fire danger in that area. also we've been talking about these major heatwaves that continue to impact this area. high pressure will still be in place. we had 21 cities across six states dealing with the hottest
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july on record. and it does look like another heatwave is starting to push across this area. so if you're not a fan of the heat, it definitery returns. palm springs, man, it's citizen ling, jonathan. 116 degrees. >> janessa, this show has led the charge to cancel summer. fall feel is the words i was grab onto. of course, we're worried about the heatwave. thank you very much. still ahead, the attorney's plans regarding donald trump and the fight against congress. what we know about that impending battle coming up next. impending battle coming up next. in the kind of work that i do, you are surrounded by people who are all younger than you. i had to get help somewhere along the line to stay competitive. i discovered prevagen. i started taking it and after a period of time, my memory improved.
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guenther ha tschida took his life on thursday. he helped to protect the capitol. kyle defray tag of the metro police force died on july 10th. he was 26 years old and had been with the department since 2016. days since the attack, two other officers have died by suicide. more than 100 officers were injured defending the capitol that day. meanwhile an attorney for donald trump says he plans to fight the release of the tax returns to congress. that comes days after the justice department legal decision said the treasury department must comply with the congressional request from 2019. that contradicted an opinion by the same office made during the trump administration. "the new york times" points that trump's attorney robert
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fischetti added that the former president plans to, quote, fight this tooth and nail and expected this legal bat toll go on for months. anthony blinken said there will be a, quote, collective response for a suspected attack on a tanker. it killed two crew members off the gulf of ayman last sunday. they said they would work on it. iran has denied any involvement in the attack. the state department also announced yesterday expanded efforts to aid afghan allies who are trying to escape the taliban. it applies to those who do not qualify for the special immigrant visa program such as afghans who worked on
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u.s.-funded projects and those employed by u.s.-based media companies or non-government organizations. they've begun evacuating some to the ft. lee military base in virginia. it's esty maltd some 50,000 people could be evacuated as the u.s. winds down its mission. president biden offers a possible preview on how democrats will take on republicans. we'll take a look at his remarks at a d.c. fund-raiser last night. before we go to break, we have a question for you. why are you awake? i'm your questions to waytooearly@msnbc.com or tweet me @jonlemire. be sure to leave out the h of #way too early. we'll read our favorite answers later in the show. your favorits later in the show.
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. welcome back to "way too early." it's coming up on 5:30 on the east coast, 2:30 on the west. i'm jonathan lemire. the white house is scrambling with how to stop landlords from kicking out renters. the white house said the president has asked the cdc to consider extending the moratorium or consider a targetted moratorium, but the cdc director thinks she lacks the authority to do so after a previous ruling that congress needed to take action. congress, meanwhile, have done little to defend it despite cori bush and ores sleeping outside the capitol to raise awareness.
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they want to use the $50 billion to help with assistance. >> they must do more, all of them, to accelerate the funding to these renters and landlords. the president is clear. if some states and localities can get this out efficiently and effectively, there's no really every state and locality can't. >> more than 6 million fear the risk of being evicted. meanwhile there was a fund-raising call for the democratic committee. the president also weighed in on what democrats must do to win in 2022. >> the most important thing we have to do is we have to protect the voting srjs protect the sacred right to vote.
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it's under assault in ways i haven't seen in my entire career. and i was the guy who was able to get the voting rights act extended 25 years. we have assisted in both of those things. what republicans want to do is say a political party gets to decide if a vote counts. it's outrageous. we're going to fight like hello so that doesn't happen. we won in 2020 as a unified party. as we look to 2022, we are staying in the fight. the question american people will be asking is whether we're helping them and their families, and do we understand what they're going through, do we understand their problem, can we deliver for them? you know, as democrats, we have to show we understand, number one, or delivery, number two, and we're keeping our promise. we just have to keep making our
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case as the republican party aurs nothing but fears, lies, and broken promises. >> joining us now, white house correspondent for politico and co-author of the playbook eugene daniels, an msnbc contributor about and he's right here. glad to see you on set, my friend. let's start with that biden call. first is that he talked about how voting rights are the defining issue of our time. yet some say he has not done enough to advocate for their cause. and the democrats' goal is over fears, lies, and promises. >> i think those things stand out. i think also -- every time they talk about voting rights, everything we keep coming back to is almost none of the rhetoric matters if you can't get a bill passed. so he has to be able to convince those moderates and tell them you need to get rid of the filibuster because that's the only thing that's going to
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challenge anything. that's what i'm hearing from civil rights leaders and activists. the president has been speak out more and more. >> let's turn to the moratorium. we us in that briefing we heard from gene sperling. it seems in the last few days, the white house, democrats and republicans have been working on issues, but not this one. it seems to be falling apart, and there's a lot of finger pointing. how do we fix this? >> no one seems to know. right now congress is at the worst game of tennis right now, back and forth, back and forth. the thing is i've been at the capitol on sunday talking to some of the congressional leaders and staff who have been out there. what they're telling us is they were blind-sided a little bit when the white house came out and said on the 29th congress has to do something with a couple of days before recess, right? they say the people who have authority is the white house and the cdc.
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the issue, though, is the white house are concerned that if the cdc oversteps what the supreme court has said, they may lose some of their power, emergency moratoria and things down the line. that's why they're not willing to go beyond. >> right. they'll come in, knock that down, and take away other things. they were saying that last night as well. i know you've been spending some time out there. bernie sanders visited the crew. describe the scene. we had congressman bush on morning joe yesterday. tell us what that's like and how longer this are they going to be out there? >> it seems like a day to day idea. i've been talking to cori bush's folks and she hasn't said how longer this she's going to stay out there. what she wants to do -- they say her, aoc is out there, gomez, dean phillips came out on sunday. there's a lot of people coming out to have a visit. that's what cori bush and these people want.
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you see people really, really concerned about, this people being evicted from the homes which could start any day is what they're telling us. i will say something that's changed over time is the capitol police has told them different things. at first they were allowed to sleep in chairs. now they can have chairs, tarps, tents, but they can't sleep. that's what i've been told. it's turning in a stranger way to do this. they're determined to stay as longer this as possible. >> there are a lot of folks that will need to stay in line for the reconciliation bill. we've heard from aoc already expressing reservations. they'red a voe indicating for more. white house has a balancing act. speaker pelosi has to do it, too, where you have to satisfy the moderates and progressives. is there any concern of ill will? >> in the white house, yes. there are conversations where people are a little worried about that. they're feeling good about the infrastructure bill, however, they know that nancy pelosi
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knows what she's doing. they hope she'll be able to keep everyone in line for the infrastructure bill. >> politico's eugene daniels. thanks so much for being here. still ahead, yankee ace gerrit cole is out with covid. but we'll show you a totally different catastrophe in the bronx last night. back in a minute. it's "way too early." lisa here, has had many jobs.
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and was not asking for any spousal support. they agree to continue the foundation following their separation. a talented team is celebrating after winning. edwin roberts was named the winner for creating an emblem for queen elizabeth's upcoming jubilee. he'll be displayed. the emblem was selected for symbolism while the continuing line of krouns honors the historic rein. meanwhile the yankees game came to a halt after a cat ran onto the feed and gave the new york grounds crew a run for their money. the crowd was shouting mvp and let's go feline.
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it's evaded capture for seven minutes. they called the cat faster than anyone on the yankees. go, cat, go. meanwhile speaking of animals, parts of lake tahoe in california are closed after officials found that chipmunks tested positive for the plague. during the time the u.s. forest service will be conducting controlled treatments of the affected areas. the bacterial disease tends to be spread by chipmunks, other wild rodents and their flees, but a county spokesperson said the chipmunks did not come into contact with any human. they expect closed parts of the lake to reopen by the weekend. the playing. still ahead, the pandemic messaging from the white house and its first coronavirus briefing in weeks. we'll take a listen when "way too early" comes right back. a too early" comes right back. he . the stinging. my skin was no longer mine.
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the delta variant is highly contagious. to put this in perspective, if you get sick with the alpha variant, you could infect about two other unvaccinated people. if you get sick with the delta variant, we estimate you could infect about five other unvaccinated people, more than twice as many as the original strain. in all of this, there is still good news. our vaccines are working to prevent severe illness, hospitalizations, and death. >> that was cdc director rochelle walensky during a white house briefing as federal health officials urge more americans to get vaccinate and warn once again about the threat from the delta variant. joining us to talk about it, shannon pettypiece. good morning. thanks for being up with us this morning. talk a little bit about the briefing. it's the first one the white house has held in a couple of weeks. it only lasted about 30 minutes
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despite the number of increased cases. what is the white house's message during this pretty precarious time in the battle against the virus? >> going into this, we have heard from administration officials they were concerned about the messaging in the media around the breakthrough infections and there's a concern too much emphasis is being put on the potential for vaccinated people to get infected with this virus, and that ended up being a big focus of this briefing they had yesterday. you had dr. fauci laying out data, including from other countries about what the vaccine efficacy was like in vaccinated people against this new delta variant. you had dr. walensky putting up slides, showing a correlation between areas with high infection rates and low vaccination rates, trying to make the case the vaccines are doing, they're doing what they're supposed to do as you heard her say in that bite,
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which is specifically prevent severe disease and hospitalization, and we know all this in the background is going on because of some cdc documents that were released to a number of media organizations last week that showed there was a lot of concern in the administration that reports of breakthrough infections could cause people to lose confidence in the vaccine if they are vaccinated and start thinking they need to get a booster shot somehow or sort of solidify some of this vaccine hesitancy out there among people who have yet to get vaccinated, who haven't done so because they don't think the vaccine works and they don't trust the data and evidence out there around them. so there is concern that this little bit of momentum they've been starting to get in their vaccination effort again is going to be hammered by all of these reports of breakthrough infections. >> of course, that frustration comes as we had a pretty high-profile breakthrough yesterday with senator lindsey
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graham, although, he made the point he was glad he had been vaccinated because his symptoms would have been much worse. we remember president trump's predecessor had attended these. has been any talk in the white house of having president biden participate in the covid briefings? i know we'll be hearing from him today in response to the pandemic. >> that seems to -- the way they've seemed to want to message with the president here is through speeches and remarks directly to camera, directly to the american people. you mentioned we're expecting to hear from him today. we heard from him last week talking about the pandemic. you know, the administration has tried to keep these briefings very focused on the science as they have tried to do with everything around the pandemic. but it's certainly a big reversal from what we saw with the trump administration when we saw they became must-see tv and
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the president would come out and often spiral way off topic with things having nothing to do with coronavirus. but in the swing of the pendulum of the day, we've ended up now with these briefings. they were daily, and then a couple of times a week. now they're happening once a week, we think. last week there wasn't one. instead there was that cdc announcement they did via teleconference, and they really always last about 30 minutes no, matter how many questions are on. i can see them lanzing 30 minutes when there's not a lot of news. there's concern around the pandemic in the surge in cases we're seeing across the country. so, you know, a lot of news, a lot of information here, and unlike the trump administration that would take every question in the room twice and i know because i was in there asking the question twice sometimes, these briefings, it's quite hard to get a question. they may take over five or six questions from reporters before
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they'll cut it off. >> they would tend to go on with trump for an hour or two or more. the white house has reached its goal about a month behind what the president had set out to do. did the administration now -- do we anticipate they'll be issuing any sort of vaccination goals, benchmarks to hit, or at this point is it all hands on deck, get as many people vaccinated as possible with the delta vashlts obviously surging particularly that particularly to this point has had low vaccination rates? >> yeah. there is no spiking the football yesterday on this 70% marker. maybe we'll hear the president talk about that more today. but certainly the goal seems to be nothing short of getting as many people vaccinated as possible, and the administration has gotten a little bit of a boost sadly from the delta variant in their vaccination efforts because in the places getting hardest hit by the variant, they've seen an uptick
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in people getting vaccinated because they're hearing in their real lives how dangerous this s what a threat it is, and how this delta variant is a different ball game from the alpha variant and people who maybe thought they didn't need to get vaccinated before they realized they needed to get vaccinated now. it's helped thesests, but, of course, we're seeing them stick to the approach with things like vaccine mandates for federal workers and people getting vaccinated that work for the federal government. so we're going to see more of the stick, not just the carrot approach. >> thank you so much. earlier in the show we asked this question, why are you awake? less writes, my husky won't let me sleep any longer, someone needs his morning walk. that dog is adorable. another viewer is up way too early cutting my morning fruit. and one viewer shared this photo
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i'm awake way too early because molly wanted a street even though you were having a serious discussion. molly concerned about the eviction moratorium. up next a look at the axios one big thing and come up on a very special "morning joe" we'll hear the inside story from a key player inside trump's first impeachment, retired lieutenant colonel alexander vindman. plus the grandsons of roosevelt and wallace join us. and breaking news, simone biles, she won the bronze medal on the balance beam. she missed much of the tokyo games after bowing out of the team's final. but she returned and this is her second bronze in the balance beam. congratulations to her and to all of team usa. eam usa. th nuca.
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joining us now with a look at axios a.m.'s congressional reporter eleyna trina. thank you for being here on set. we appreciate it. what is axios's one big thing. >> good morning. today our one big thing is about how president biden and his top aides are pushing back against progressive activists who are trying to get them to pressure supreme court justice steven briar to retire. he's turning 83 in two weeks. he's now the court's most senior liberal justice. but a lot of -- you know, i think a lot of progressives have ptsd from what happened with justice ginsburg and her hanging on through the obama years but president biden and ron klain worry that trying to apply pressure privately and publicly could backfire and look like
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they're trying to politicize the courts. so they're kind of making clear for everyone who's trying to say, hey, let's see if we can have him vacate a seat and replace him, the white house is saying we're not on that train. >> the concern is the democrats could lose control of the senate next fall and therefore the clock is ticking. let's switch to the pandemic. and axios has been doing a new poll, measuring who the americans blame for a rise in cases. what did you find? >> we have a partnership with ipsios and it says the majority of vaccinated americans are blaming the unvaccinated for the spike in cases. we're seeing 40,000 people right now hospitalized with covid cases. so just a massive surge, similar to what we've seen last spring and summer. others, the unvaccinated seem to be mostly blaming foreign travelers and people coming into the u.s.
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others have blamed the former president, trump, for his rhetoric and conservative media. but overwhelmingly, particularly among the vaccinated, think the unvaccinated are the ones responsible for the spike. >> and the white house is concerned about the backlash, the resentment from the vaccinated. saying hey we did what we had to do, now we have to roll back, put masks on, so that's going to be an interesting divide to watch ahead. what's the data say, the breakdown, in terms of who and where are the people in the hospitals? >> it's by far mostly the unvaccinated. and really if you don't have a vaccine, the delta variant is so potent right now and it's really leading to a new surge. scientists predict that it will be higher than the first waves that we saw at the start of the pandemic. so very concerning.
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and we're seeing florida, in particular, has had a very large spike among their residents and unvaccinated americans. and, of course, there is the chance that if you are vaccinated you could test positive, we saw yesterday senator lindsey graham announced he tested positive for the virus despite being fully vaccinated. but it's such a small percentage of people who are vaccinated who not only are testing positive but even smaller percentage that they'd be hospitalized. so really a focus on trying to get people to be vaccinated right now. >> we should note graham was on joe manchin's house vote, and along with other senators who have since tested negative but will be tested in the days ahead. we are seeing a rise in vaccination rates in some of the states hardest hit by the delta
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variant, and have a low vaccination rate. is this fear, is the message getting through? what are local officials saying? are they encouraged by this? >> they are. from my reporting, i'm sure you have similar being at the white house and on the hill, people are really scared and seeing family members again go through this, seeing mask mandates like president biden said, masks required indoors again. this idea that potentially we're going back to this place that we were before is really, i think, creating a lot of fear among the unvaccinated. especially as you see family members get sick again. it's leading to maybe i should get vaccinated. >> people in the hospitals saying i wish i had gotten the shot. thank you for being here. great to see you. thank you all for getting up way too early with us this morning. "morning joe" starts right now,
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i'll see you over there. good morning. and welcome to "morning joe." it is tuesday, august 3rd. joe, we've got a lot going on today, including breaking news from tokyo. >> we do. and willie and i, speaking of tokyo, back last night on the red eye, we were one of these old timers, synchronized swimmers that were gold medalists in the late '80s. >> you still fit in that bathing suit, joe, very impressive. i don't know what they call it nowadays -- >> speedos. they're still speedos. >> willie and i crowd favorites because we did the 1988 games. it's all a blur, summer of love and all of that. we have breaking news items lining up. i know we wanted to stay for another day of fun and festivities b