tv Jose Diaz- Balart Reports MSNBC August 8, 2022 7:00am-8:00am PDT
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with xfinity internet, you get advanced security that helps protect you at home and on the go. you feel so safe, it's as if... i don't know... evander holyfield has your back. i wouldn't click on that. hey, thanks! we got a muffin for ed! all right! you don't need those calories. can we at least split it? nope. advanced security that helps protect your devices in and out of the home. i mean, can i have a bite? only from xfinity. nah. unbeatable internet. made to do anything so you can do anything. good morning. 10:00 a.m. eastern. i'm jose diaz-balart. kicking off two hours of coverage this morning. president biden's big historic agenda win. senate democrats passed the party line climate tax and health care bill and faces a
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final hurdle in the house before heading to the president's desk. in moments i'll talk with democratic congressman krishnamoorthi about that. and a firestorm with the visit to taiwan. right now president biden is in the air expected to land in kentucky this hour. the president and first lady meeting with the governor and family impacted by deadly flooding there. i'll speak with a kentucky school superintendent there. a summer comes to a close. any moment sentencing for the ahmoud arbery. after a long, hot summer of
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low polling, bruising political defeats and concern of red wave a victory has many democrats feeling some wind at the backs. on sunday the senate passed the sprawling $430 billion inflation reduction act on a 50-50 party line vote after 22-hour work day. vice president harris breaking the tie in the end sending the bill to the house. set to return friday to give the bill final approval. it represents a critical piece of president biden's agenda touching on tax law, drug prices and climate. here's part of what's inside. more than $300 billion in climate investigationments. a $35 cap on insulin. negotiating prices with drug
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companies and a new 15% minimum tax on large corporations. we got the first remarks from president biden own this huge bill. >> for example, no senior will have on medicare will have a bill more than $2,000 for drugs. that's a big deal. changes peoples' lives. a whole range of things. some doesn't kick in for a little bit but it is going to lower the daily -- sitting down at the kitchen table you can pay more because of less medical bills. >> let's get to ali vitali and monica mann, doerk of the center for science, sustainability and
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media and author of "the new climate war." ali, it was a very long weekend. what are you hearing today from lawmakers? >> reporter: very long weekend. imagine that senators went home and went straight to bed but still feeling the momentum after that 22-how shall session over the weekend that resulted in passing this sweeping piece of legislation from health care and drug costs to the economy and deficit reduction and the funding to fighting climate change. that's just some of what the democrats hope to take on the trail with them. they acknowledge a long road in gettinging here and things originally in the bill and things that fell out because people like joe manchin couldn't keep them in.
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he didn't want them but ended up in a place saying that this bill is historic. take a listen. >> i'm not saying we got it all done. there's more work to do but you see the possibility of what can happen putting the special interests on the sideline and do what's right for people. >> reporter: again this is not over yet but looks like a glide path. the senate was the major hurdle. after clearing that the house will come back on friday tacking a pause on the august recess to do their part on this bill. we are expecting no snafus there and then straight to president biden's desk allowing democrats to notch this win officially and then take it into the midterms. >> what is the reaction from the white house like? >> this is a president who said he is the most optimistic. remember just a couple months
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ago the president said he made a mistake in negotiations by he says being too involved. he said the public doesn't want a president senator. he said i'll let senators be senators and seems to be a big part of the is successful recipe that led to this on the heels of other legislation that the president was able to shepherd through and oversee. the white house is feeling extremely encouraged and giving democrats momentum. they'll be talking about this list of american recovery act that passed. the bipartisan infrastructure bill. that manufacturing chips bill that the president is sooning here this week and then the inflation reduction act, more than $3 trillion in spending that this white house believes
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is helping working families get back to work and things the president talked about as candidate biden and said the reason he wanted to run in the first place and be president. he is feeling emboldened by this but took a step back for a successful stretch of the presidency so far. >> how significant are the climate provisions in the bill? staggering. more than $300 billion in climate investments? >> good to be with you. we have bad news talking at the climate crisis and flooding in kentucky is reminder but we have good news here. this is historic legislation.
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by far the largest commitment that we have ever made to clean energy, to the transition which is fundamentally necessary to avert catastrophic warming. $300 billion. what that's doing is finally putting the thumb on the right side of the scale. we have incentives to the fossil fuel energy. finally now we are getting the incentives on the right side and will make a real difference. policy experts tell us this will reduce carbon emissions by 40% in the next decade. it representing a good faith effort on the part of the united states to address the climate
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crisis and critical because we can't get china and india come to the table if we are not doing our part and will have positive ramifications for global climate action. >> looking at $300 billion, what kind of real world effects and where's that money going to be going to? what's needed? >> it is helping us produce solar panels and electric vehicles. the nuts and bolts that produce clean energy and provides incentives to consumers. there are incentives to get the energy from clean sources. there is no way to address the crisis without decarbonizing the
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economy. now does it provide everything that climate advocates like to see? no. i would like to see carbon pricing and a ban on new fossil fuel infrastructure rather than additional drilling rights. a few things thrown in to appease red state democrats, coal state democrat in particular of joe manchin and says we are making progress but to make more progress we need to turn out in droves to get an even larger majority in congress to pass more aggressive climate action. >> yeah. it is interesting. they work by incentivizing good climate behavior. is that -- it is a different approach. is that the right approve? >> i think you need the carrot
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and the stick. there's carrot in there. we need the stick too. we need disinventives. only one of the two parties now, the democratic party, shows any interest in the crisis of our time. >> thank you for being with with us. monica, it is great to see you back. new name. with a beautiful tall 6-month-old boy. good to see you back. >> gracias. >> gracias. with us now is illinois congressman raja krishnamoorthi. it is great to see you again. what's this bill do for your constituents in illinois? >> it's got so much good stuff.
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lowers carbon emissions so that more people can buy solar panels and electric vehicles and energy saving appliances but lowers prescription drug prices, lowers insurance premiums on the obamacare exchanges and lowers the inflation. so overall it is a big win for our constituents and i'm excited at getting it signed into law. >> there are some in your party, congressman, say the bill doesn't go far enough. what do you expect to happen when the house returns on friday to take up the bill? >> i think the vast majority of the colleagues on the democratic side will support this and then come back for more. unfortunately the senate
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parliamentarian stripped out the cap for insulin for those people on private insurance. we should introduce legislation to make that a reality. but everything else happening within the bill is a big plus and i think it will command a lot of volts. >> you're a lawmaker that traveled with house speaker nancy pelosi last week including the stop in taiwan. almost a week later china is still upset. expanding live fire drills around taiwan. are you surprised? >> unfortunately i am not surprised. the tantrum and the live fire xefr sizes happened before and happening again but if the price of not seeing that type of irresponsible behavior the
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ceding control of hong kong or the travel schedule to the chinese communist party that is not a price we will pay, jose. >> the plane you traveled on to taiwan took the long way to get there instead of the direct route. did you worry about the safety? china was saying all kinds of things. >> yeah. there's crazy statements, especially in the government sponsored -- their equivalent of twitter verse. we were in the safe hands of the officer as well as the navy. and our good men and women in uniform took extremely good care of us making sure that we put in
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counter measures to whatever the chinese communist party was doing to dissuade us from going to taiwan. >> bipartisan group of lawmakers is working on a bill to bolster taiwan's defense capabilities. politico reports the white house is pushing back against that legislation worried to upset the balance and provoke a conflict with china. what is your take on that? >> i respectfully disagree with the white house. i think right now we have to help. under the taiwan relations act we have an obligation we have a -- we have to remember that to avoid what happened in ukraine happening in taiwan we have to achieve peace through strength helping the taiwanese shoring up
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the defenses. providing whatever equipment is necessary for our own forces in the pacific to resist the use of force by the chinese and deter them from moving on taiwan militarily. >> congressman krishnamoorthi, i thank you so much. >> thank you. next hour talking to gina mccarthy. still ahead, we are keeping eyes on kn where in about half an hour president biden and the first lady will arrive in lexington. what they'll be doing with the governor next. who the killer in new mexico appears to be targeting.
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albuquerque's muslim community on high alert as police fear a serial killer could be targets muslim men. authority investigating the targeted killings dating back to november with the latest taking place friday. the man attended the funeral of two victims hours earlier. police are seeking the public's health to identify this car of possible interest. joining us is guad vineg as. what is the latest? >> reporter: authorities released that photo of the volkswagen sedan with particular marks on the rim. that's one thing they noted for people to try to identify it and a reward.
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$20,000 for information to lead to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible for what's happening here in albuquerque. the latest killings on friday. the name hasn't been -- that name isn't given by authorities but a family member spoke to the media and shared details. this man had just taken an oath of citizenship in the u.s. found work as a driver. eventually bought his own truck and just a month after taking the oath of citizenship found shot and killed here in albuquerque. you can imagine what the muslim community is going through. this is a city of 500,000. the muslim community is less than 1%.
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to have four men found dead is very alarming. authorities are working together. you have the fbi, local and state authorities trying to do what they can to protect the community. they have added patrol units to the community where the muslim residents live and doing what they can to find more information and asking members of the public with videos or tos to upload them to the site. as we wait for more information on what's happening here in albuquerque. >> i thank you so much for that up date. president biden and the first lady will arrive to kentucky and that state continues to grapple with the devastation of deadly flooding. meanwhile local officials tasked
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with planning for the school year after several schools were completely flooding and some students and staff are homeless. joining us is the superintendent of the perry county school district in kentucky, jonathan jett. you mentioned in an interview you have never seen anything like this. what are you seeing and what happened in your district? >> some of the communities are just completely devastated. lost everything, homes, cars, family members. so it is extremely sad to see the heart ache that people are dealing with right now. >> according to the district website school supposed to start this thursday but what does this damage mean for the upcoming school year? >> i have to relocate students
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from two of the buildings. both schools suffered significant damage and it will be months if not years before we can provide instruction in those two facilities. >> i just wonder, what does a detayed school year mean for children who depend on the meals? >> we provide meals throughout the community. if there's a delayed start. we pushed the start date back to august 29 now and we will be providing meals up until that day for our students. in our community the school is kind of a central hub of all resources. providing clothing and any food needs that they have but we also have nurses at the schools,
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therapists. we provide a mobile dental lab at the schools so it is where the families have an opportunity to get the services that they need in the school. >> it is so important that you talk about the importance of the schools in so many real ways. i'm thinking about there are so many undocumented families that live in kentucky. people who are working in so many different areas of our economy yet they may not have access to the federal or state help that is available to other folks and so important they know the school is a safe place to get information and get help. >> right. with the damage to the two schools we want them to know that they can go to the other schools and we'll provide the same services to those students
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and families. >> for viewers who want to help, how can we help? >> basically just make donations. we need monetary doe nations. families lost everything and need to be helped financially so that they can possibly rent a car and go to other family members to get back on their feet. >> jonathan jett, thank you so much. really appreciate what you are doing. >> thank you. hundreds of people fleeing haiti in u.s. custody after landing in the florida keys over the weekend. why people are leaving the islands in droves. we'll talk to a journalist closely following this storey.
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arbery. two will face sentencing later today. three men found guilty of federal hate crimes for targeting arbery because he was black. they were found guilty of murder in state court. ron allen is live outside the courthouse with more. ron? >> reporter: jose, the question is whether they will be sentenced to life in federal prison and state prison. the defendants, the mcmichaels and william bryant, requested to serve in federal prison first because it is thought to be safer and a better arrangement for them. travis mcmichael who fired the fatal shots said they received
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death threats and fearful for their lives and there are people waiting for him. the picture is circulated around the prisons and people are gunning for him and the guards might cooperate in this process. so that is what the defendants are trying to do, trying to get some leniency while the arbery is trying to push the judge to give them the most possible. we are hearing victim pact statements. the grief and loss they are still feeling. again the men convicted in state and federal court and face life sentences here today. there's separate hearings for each throughout the day. will they get life in prison in
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federal prison. the families want them to serve maximum in state prison and the rest of their lives in prison. jose? >> ron allen, thank you so much. a group of 300 haitian migrants arrived in florida. they took into custody more than 250 people from 16 individual boat landings. most from haiti. and cuba. both islands have deteriorating conditions. joininging us is jacklyn charles. great to see you. talk to us first about the conditions both in haiti and cuba that's causing record numbers of people to leave. >> exactly. we saw last summer in july, the
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assassination of the haitian president and then protests in cuba with arrests and human rights abuses going on. economically in both countries there's deterioration of the economy. this haiti this weekend we saw the assassination of a former senator burned alive in his vehicle with his nephew. ongoing gang violence. last month over 500 people killed or injured in gang fighting. the situation is very dire, especially in haiti and leading people to just get on boats and risk the lives because they say it's unbearable to remain in that country. >> you have a situation in cuba coming on 63 years of
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dictatorship. you asked the white house press secretary this weekend how they respond to those who think that president biden doesn't care about haiti. you quoted something the president said in 1994 as a senator. >> haiti could slip into the ocean and no one would notice. what do they say to people who believe that president biden doesn't care? over 0,000 haitians have been expelled from the u.s. and returned to haiti in seven months of this year. the how do you okay knowledge this? she said that president biden does care. the situation is complicated.
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>> oh boy. yet there's easy things people could do to help in haiti and also the policy on what happens when haitians arrive to the united states looking to get out of the issues epa yet that's very complicated and what's going on in cuba. thank you so much. go ahead. >> thank you. >> no, please. >> just the police are outmanned and outgunned and yet the united states and allies not able to figure out to get them weapons. the laws in the united states doesn't allow taxpayer dollars to provide arms to police but we have a u.s. arms embargo. groups get in automatic weapons. we have three shipments in the last couple weeks so as the united states there are things to do to help this country help's. >> jacklyn, i thank you so much.
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russia says it is ready to discuss a prisoner swap with the u.s. after wnba star brittney griner was sentenced after being found guilty of drug possession and smuggling. former new mexico governor bill richardson not directly involved in the talking told nbc news he is convinced there will be a prisoner exchange. >> i think my view is that i'm optimistic. i think she will be freed and
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contrition, a good legal team. there's going to be a prisoner swap and i think two or two involving paul whelan. >> with us to talk about this is rick stengel. great seeing you. he expects a two for two exchange with russia. what would that look like? >> hi, jose. i don't know that governor richardson has much knowledge or insight into this. i thought that biden saying that he was hopeful on friday is a good sign. the russians saying they're willing to negotiate. i think all the speculation isn't always that helpful. as i have said before the pressure comes from people
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wanting her release which is completely understandable. vladimir putin doesn't have any pressure in russian television for viktor bout's release and gives leverage to putin than helps us. i know that's an unsatisfactory answer, jose. >> it is a clear one when there's so little that's clear. how complicated are the notions coming to freeing americans detained overseas? >> very complicated. i worked on some of this in the state department dealing with the families of those that are hostages or unfairly taken. it is not a one for one thing. i think that's why typically with russia now and the invasion
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of ukraine, with the relationships with russia at almost a historic low the negotiations become more difficult. tony blinken spoke to the russian foreign minister for the first time since the ukrainian invasion. to me that's not a bad thing and the more to talk to the russians the better but they want to exact the pound of flesh for this. >> i wonder and no one better for perspective than you. is blirngen who talks to lavrov about this or start the communication process after you say the invasion of ukraine frozen the communications. who starts that? how's that process carried out? >> i think, jose, i don't know
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exact details. there's a hostage office at the state department and similar one in the white house. they're in constant communications with the families 0 those talken and held hostage. i would assume there's lower level negotiations with the russians and the white house and the state department and that any deal to come up with would have to be signed off by secretary blinken, by the president, by lavrov and putin. this is such a highly documented publicized affair and the fact to talk about it right now on the show means the higher ups have to sign off on a deal and eventually what will happen and not sure it will happen right away. >> always a pleasure to learn
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millions of students are preparing for new school year but districts are facing a teacher shortage. there's concern about the quality of education kids are getting. joining us from cleveland, jesse kir sh. good morning. how bad is the teachers shortage? >> reporter: good morning. this is a lingering problem for years some will tell you. for example in cleveland right now they say they have 95% of the positions filled with active recruiting every week. dallas had to look at salary bumps and bonuses. this is the landscape across the country right now.
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>> we are seeing what we could call a mad scramble to try to fill classrooms. >> reporter: florida alone has more than 8,000 teacher openings. >> there's been a teacher shortage for years. what you are seeing now is that it is a tipping point. >> reporter: so right now what we are lookinging at some people leaning into increased pay. something that some teacher unions support and then other actions including loosening the requirements to be able to start teaching. some states before a bachelor's degree and certificate. so it's creating this debate whether that is the right approach. might get someone in front of the kids but not setting them up
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to succeed to give them the long term success. this is dealt with across the country as kids are starting to head back to school today. >> indeed. thank you very much. i want to end with good news about hard work and dedication. i spoke to two custodians fulfilling the dreams of becoming teachers in the school system. they walked the hallways so many times before. next week they will walk but with a different feeling. >> it will be really cool. >> i'm excited. >> two former custodians fulfilling a dream. after serving in the navy steven moved back and became a custodians. >> kids need a clean classroom
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to learn in. teachers need a clean classroom to teach in. >> the dreams are becoming reality literally. >> i literally had a dream that i was teaching. i remember the feeling waking up and smiling ear to ear. god is telling me what i need to do. >> he went to school during the day and worked at night. >> it is about the next generation really. we are here to help them to grow. >> he'll be teaching seven grade history. diane moved from more nine years ago. she knew she wanted to do more. >> but at the same time i had dreams. i want to do something to the community. >> she balanced family and work while earning a degree. next week she teaches bilingual
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classes to first graders. >> a great picture from the first time you saw your classroom. how did you feel at that moment? >> incredible. >> they will walk the hallways again. how will it feel walking down the hallways you know so well from a different perspective? >> i have a smile. >> providing a true lesson in hard work and dedication. >> look. the first time to get that look where a student lights up with understanding, like that's going to be great. i hope to see that a million times over in the future. >> steven and diane, dreams come true but through hard work. i'll be back with more news and speaking to chef jose andres about the work the organization is continuing to do to help the people of ukraine.
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the eastern region of the state and touring the damage. the floods killed 37 people. the trip coming on the heels of another major win for the president's agenda, sweeping bill to address health kane climate change. it includes more than $300 billion in climate investments. we'll talk with president biden's national climate adviser on that including a $35 cap on insulin and minimum tax on large corporations. joining us now white house correspondent kelly o'donnell, capitol hill correspondent ali vitali. what's the message going to be from the president? >> reporter: i think this will be a mission that will accomplish a couple different things. part of it is the job of the
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