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tv   State of the Union With Jake Tapper and Dana Bash  CNN  May 13, 2024 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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369369. >> i'm under roger and capitol hill. >> this cnn split-screen. >> president biden hits the trail out. well that's donald trump's squeezes in and new jersey rally amid his hush money trial. >> we're going to win the state of new jersey now. trump's one time fixer turn the former president into a convicted felon, potential vice presidential pick, jd vance joins me exclusively and shockwaves a stunning shift from biden non us support for israel. >> they go into rafah. i'm not supplying the weapons. >> israel orders more evacuations in rafah will the president followed through connecticut? senator chris murphy is here exclusively plus
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on the ground, my trip with the first woman serving as female administrator. what's from biggest concern, how she's getting a more women on the front lines of disaster relief aid help reach out via administrator diane, chris, well ahead hello, i'm dana bash and washington where the state of our union is wishing all the moms out there. >> i haven't it'd be mother's day. this coming week. we could see the final stages of donald trump's hush money trial and neighboring new jersey, trump vented his anger late saturday afternoon ahead of expected testimony from the star witness in the case, former trump fixer, michael cohen on the west coast, president joe biden is looking to capitalize on his opponents predicament, calling trump, quote, clearly unhinged during a closed-door fundraiser, but biden faces growing political problems of his own after his stark new ultimatum, this week
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to israel in an interview on cnn vowing to block some us military aid to israel if it invades the gazan city of rafah. israel seems undeterred, ordering 300,000 gazans outer rafah. it all leaves biden with strain support among democrats and a middle ground that seems to have left no one happy. something trump tried to seize on at his rally crooked joe's action is one of the worst betrayals of an american ally in the history of our country. >> i support israel's right to win its war on terror. is that okay? >> i don't know i don't know if that's good or bad politically. i don't care you gotta do what's right? here with me now is potential trump vice presidential pick, republican senator jd vance of ohio. he's going to be joining former president trump at an event in cincinnati this week on wednesday. thank you so much for being here. it's nice to see you in person. i want to
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start with the mideast and president biden announcing on wednesday that he would block some shipments of us weapons if israel invades rafah. he's frustrated after months of telling the israeli prime minister to be more targeted. he doesn't think that netanyahu is changing course and the president believes that too many civilians have been killed with us weapons. is that a fair concern well, first all dana, let me say happy mother's day. >> thanks to you and all the mom's watching. but to answer your question, i think there are two big problems with what the vitamins duration is doing. first of all, it's a fundamentally incoherent policy on the one hand, they're saying too many palestinian civilians it's have been killed with the other hand, they're depriving is the israelis of the precision guided weapons that actually cut down on civilian casualties. so if you're worried about palestinian casualties, the stated policy here actually doesn't make a ton of sense. and i think the bigger problem here, if we zoom out is look and i hate to say this, but america is not good at micro-managing wars in the
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middle east. joe biden has been president for four years, but he's really presided over as a senator and a vice president. many of the biggest disasters we've had in foreign policy in the middle east over the last 40 years. and i think that our attitude vis-a-vis the israeli should be look, we're not good at micro-managing middle eastern wars rayleigh's our allies let them prosecutors war the way they see the argument that president biden has made we understand and private and he's done it in public because that he is trying to get the israeli prime minister to learn the lessons of wars in the by the way, it was a republican who is president george w the way that the us responded and afghanistan. and of course, the war in iraq to learn the lessons and he doesn't believe that the prime minister is doing so. >> i completely concede, by the way, was a republican president in iraq though with democratic buy-in from people like joe biden. but i think to learn the
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lessons, not just iraq, it's afghanistan of multiple conflicts. look, we've not been good at this and that's been a bipartisan failure by the way, it's one of the reasons why i think dots trump was a good foreign policy president. he departed from that wisdom. but to answer your question, dana, who looked at the fundamental problem here, is the israelis have a goal in mind. hamas started a war by murdering a large number of israeli civilians. and now that they're 80% defeated, they're throwing up their hands and saying, uncle, now, yeah, palestinians million casualties is a real issue and our heart certainly goes out to them. we have to ask ourselves, why are palestinian civilian casualties so high? it's because hamas started the war and now they hide behind palestinian civilians. so if you want to learn the lessons, i think of the last 40 years, the most important thing is we have to defeat hamas as a viable military organization. >> you're never going to defeat the ideology of hamas, but you can root out those commanders, those final military trained battalions. >> and i think we should empower the israelis to do it, that the final point here, dana, it's very important. >> our goal in the middle east
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should be to allow the israelis to get to some good place with the saudi arabians and other golf eric states there is no way that we can do that unless the israelis finish the job with hamas, if they can't even do that, the attitude and the middle east will be, you can't trust these guys. >> they're not pursuing their own national security. so we've got to let them finish this job, but i think hopefully on the other end of it, get two new era in the middle east. >> i want to ask about something i think that donald trump said in on social media. he said, what biden is doing with respect to israel as disgraceful if any jewish person voted for joe biden, they should be ashamed of themselves. he's totally abandon israel. you tweeted that donald trump was right about that. so i just wanted to be clear. you think that jewish people who vote but if for joe biden should be ashamed of themselves for what i think dana is that people should look at the record here and recognize that donald trump has actually been really good for the state of israel. we had peace and prosperity in our country and we had a very
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stalwart ally of the israelis. now, joe biden is president, the israelis had been attacked you've got these terrible campus protests with a lot of anti-semitic overtones all over our country. and you also have him trying to micromanage the israeli response to them being attacked. do i think it's reasonable to look at this situation and say that if you're a jewish american who cares about the state of israel, who cares about these anti-semitic riots? and say, you should be on the side of republicans in 2024 because they govern effectively on some of the issues that you care about. i think it's a totally reasonable argument to make, and i think that donald trump's going to keep on making it historically, the notion of saying two jews you should put israel first and what happens in israel first, and not consider them american citizens first has been used as an anti-semitic trope do you do recognize that there and perhaps that language isn't exactly on point when you're
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talking about something that is very, very sick. >> a tinderbox right now, we have to remember donald trump is very direct here and said he was right and he hasn't singled out jewish americans. he singled out a lot of people for voting for joe biden and suggest testing. they've got to wake up and elect him as president in 2024. so i don't think there's any effort to single out jewish americans and just on that particular question about tropes, i mean, look, we know that jewish americans and non-jewish americans care about our ally, israel. we know that jewish americans and non-jewish americans care a lot about these ridiculous protests i actually have a friend of mine whose brother was graduating from columbia, who had the graduation ceremony cancel. and that's a non-jewish person who cares a lot about these anti-semitic protests. so i think the fact that donald trump is talking about jews in that particular context does not mean he doesn't think the same lessons apply to a whole host of american citizens. >> yeah, because he did say that a jewish person who voted for joe biden should be ashamed of themselves. i want to move on. he said similar comments about a lot of different groups of people.
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>> dana, i don't think anybody could look at the presidency in the conduct of donald trump and say, this is a person who's somehow anti-semitic. and i think whether you're jewish or not, you should be looking at the record of joe biden enter with nick 20s, who is an avowed and dana, you should look at the record of joe biden and recognize that whether you're jewish are not his presidency has been a disaster for the american. i want to ask about what we saw this past week and it's going to continue this week the trial in new york, adult film actress stormy daniels testified about her allegation of a sexual encounter with donald trump. now, actor, the access hollywood tape in 2016, you tweeted, quote, fellow christians, everyone is watching us when we apologize for this man lord help us. now you've since deleted that tweet. do you still feel that way about donald trump's sexual industry indiscretions? >> well, first of all, donald trump is not on trial for sexual indiscretions. this is a sham trial where they're saying his misdeeds is that he
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violated the law, that he committed a crime. you can't throw somebody in prison in the middle of a presidential election because you think that he did something bad? ten years ago. so i think we have to separate these arguments from the actual criminal trial. that's attempting to in my view, dana interfere in a presidential election. but look, my view on donald trump had been very clear on this is look, i was wrong about him i didn't think he was going to be good president data, and i was very, very proud to be proven wrong. it's one of the reasons why i'm working so hard to get them elected. i think the contrast here is really from joe biden, who delivered chaos in the world stage rising cost of living here at home to donald trump, who delivered peace and prosperity to the american people and to the world that's a very, very simple contrast to make. and i think republicans just have to hammer that message home because we've got the winning horse here and we've got the winning message. and i just want to be clear, the the notion of what you're right, that he's not on trial for alleged sexual indiscretions. >> it's something else but do
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you think that he should be treated differently because he was a former president because he is running for president. and if he is convicted you still support him. >> well, i don't think you should be treated differently at all, dana, but i certainly think he is being treated differently. the only thing that alvin bragg, the new york prosecutors team, thinks donald trump did wrong isn't he ran for president in 2024, and it looks to be on the cusp of victory that is the only thing that this is ultimately about. if you look at the underlying argument of the case, they can't even identify what it is that donald trump, did. they said he committed a paperwork violation in the service of a crime, but they won't even specify the crime that he allegedly committed. and i think that when you look at all of these attacks on donald trump, you have to, you have to be honest with yourself and say, this is not about law, and this is not about justice, this is about the fact that president joe biden has a failed record as commander in chief and leader this country, and the democrats can't talk about that. so what they're doing is putting these trials out there and saying focus on
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this, not on the fact that the world is on fire, and the fact that you have gotten poor under the presidency of joe biden? yeah, i a lot of things to unpack there. >> we're almost out of time. i just want to look forward 2024 this election that election year that we're in, will you commit to accepting the results? of this year's election? >> book, dana, i totally plan to accept the results of 2024. i think that donald trump will be the victory. and if it's a free and fair election, dana, i think every republican will enthusiastically accept the results. and again, i think those results will show that donald trump has been elected president, didn't reelected president i think this question though, it's interesting, dana, because we have to be willing as democrats did in 2000, as democrats have done in the past. and certainly as republicans did in 2020 is if you think there were problems, you have to be willing to pursue those problems and tried to prosecute the case. and certainly, if we have a free and fair election, i'll accept the results even if joe biden
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wins. >> sure. if it's a free and fair election, i will accept the results standard, whoever wins, okay. senator, thank you so much. thanks to appreciate you. come in coming up. >> did president biden's very public shift on israel in an interview? with our own erin burnett, make the issue even harder for him politically. senator chris murphy is here live plus a headache in the 2024 campaign how rfk jr. is causing one i've just for joe biden, but it seems donald trump, our panel will weigh in more than $500 million in art stolen. >> nice saw what turned out to be the biggest heist in history. you can't help but wonder if this was some sort of inside job pow would really happen with jesse l. >> martin sunday at nine on cnn. >> what is circle? circle is which hopeful line toss limited way circle digital far to treat for this week, you could conference so-called is the
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president biden spent months trying to navigate the push and the pull from fellow democrats when it comes to israel. >> but this week he put conditions on us aid to israel for the first time. is he isolating himself from both sides of the middle east debate. you're with me now to discuss that, is senator chris murphy, a member of the foreign relations committee and a critic of the way israel has been carrying out its war in gaza. thank you so much for being here. do you support what president biden told erin burnett that he is blocking some military aid to israel and won't support them will block more if in fact israel goes into rafah more aggressively. >> i do support president biden's decision. let me tell you why president biden is learning the mistakes of us military campaign in iraq and afghanistan. what we learned in both of those efforts was that you can't and not defeat a terrorist ideology. you're not cannot defeat a terrorist movement with military force alone. and afghanistan, we spent 20 years there and
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ultimately we were so cavalier about civilian casualties that we made the taliban stronger. and we ultimately lost that engagement to the taliban. and so in israel, what joe biden is telling the israelis is we we'll be partners with you, but you have to understand that the pace of civilian casualties, the amount of humanitarian disaster there is in the long run going to make hamas stronger, is going to make it more likely that israel will be attacked again and is going to make other terrorist organizations that have designed to attack the united states stronger. so we will be partners in this fight, but in the situation of rafah, we cannot have a military invasion of rafah that ends up in tens of thousands of additional civilians dying. that would be bad for israel from a moral and a strategic standpoint. so the counter-argument that is not just coming from republicans, but also some democrats, your fellow democrat from pennsylvania, john fetterman. >> it and he actually said with withholding military aid, quote demonstrates to hamas that they're winning the pr war and
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they're exploiting america has compassion so does he have a point there that what the president said is actually come doing the opposite of what you just warned of. and it actually is helping hamas. >> so we have no obligation to write a blank check of military support to any of our allies. we have a right as a sovereign nation with our own independent security concerns to make sure that when we are partnering with an ally, that we are partnering with a winning strategy our own national security experts tell us that this is a generation, this, this moment will have a generational impact on the growth of terrorism around the globe. i want her mask on. i don't want them to ever have the ability to hit israel again, i worry that the number of civilians that are dying are ultimately going to provide permanent recruiting material to hamas us and hamas will remain a threat for years to come to israel the reality though is that hamas is still
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not just a military wing in gaza. >> they, they are the governing body in gaza. and i guess my question is on that if you were president or fewer, completely directing the war, even in israel, how would you eliminate hamas? >> in a way that's different and more effective than what you're describing because the understatement of the year is it ndc? well, let's let's just make sure that we understand there's limit to american influence on israeli politics. >> but what do you think israel should be doing? >> so i think israel should be open to bringing in the palestinian in authority to be a transition governance structure inside gaza. how does that eliminate hamas? that is something that will listen, i think every intelligence expert has already come to the conclusion, you are not going to be able to eliminate hamas,
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right? you are. >> there's going to continue to be a result the movement to the state of israel. >> and the question is, is it going to be weaker? are stronger after 13, 15,000 kids are killed inside gaza. my argument is that right now the prospects are that it is going to be stronger. and so if israel makes a, more, a more concrete commitment to a future palestinian state i think right now, or within the next several months, i think that is one of the most important things it can do to try to dry up the recruitment material that right now is very live for hamas or follow-on organizations to hamas. and that's one of the things that worries me is that we do not see that commitment being made, which i think is essential for the survival of a jewish state in the middle east, something that i, democrats and republicans are deeply desirous of the state department released a report late on friday that said, quote, it was quote, reasonable to assess that us weapons have been used by israeli forces in ways, quote inconsistent with
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international law. >> but the report stopped short of reaching an actual conclusion on whether israel has violated humanitarian law. >> i know you've been pushing for this report for months. >> are you satisfied i listen, i think the report could have gone further, but it does. >> i think accurately explain the complexity of this war. and let's just also be clear about that. yes, i believe that there have been some very disastrous decisions on proportionality made by the israeli military if there's one hamas fighter in an apartment building, it is not worth it to kill 50 innocent civilians but it is also true as my friend center vance said that hamas is hiding itself inside, so it's going to be my next question. yes, inside civilian populations, they are hiding themselves in hospitals inside schools. there's no doubt that this war could end tomorrow if hamas surrendered, if hamas really cares about the people of gaza, they could decide to end this war right now, there's a ceasefire proposal on the table
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that they could accept. so i i am certainly willing to call it is really when i think that they have made strategic and moral mistakes in this war but a lot of the focus here tends to be on israel when we should the calling out hamas for the attacks that began this war, the way in which they had violated the rules of engagement and the fact that the quickest route to end this war is for hamas to surrender and protect the people of gaza just on the rob politics of this do you think that when the president said what he said to erin burnett this week that what ended up happening is he tried to i don't want to take away from what he tried to do on policy, but just on the politics that had ended up kind of pleasing, no one has that a potential problem, or do you think that is what he said and did is helpful for his detractors on the left, less and i i think the president makes decisions when it comes to the security of this country
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based upon what he thinks is good you put the reality is it's been hurting him on the left but i don't i don't i don't mind the fact that the president isn't paying attention to the politics. >> i think frankly, when you're being a good leader, who you often upsetting people on the right and the left. and so president biden advertise himself when he ran for office as someone who would often play it down the middle, who would not pay attention to the extremes of the debate and would just do what he thought was right for the country and what the broad middle of the country wants and actually think that's where the broad middle of the country is. i think the broad middle of the country wants to support israel's ability to destroy hamas, but is very concerned about the fact that there are so many kids in that for the last week, there's been no humanitarian assistance getting into the country. i think the president really is squarely where the middle of this country is on this, on this conflict. >> and i guess part of the problem we at a time is that humanitarian assistance some of
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it they got in was taken by hamas away from its own people. that's right, center. thank you. thank you. appreciate you being here up next. both campaigns are shifting their strategies on robert f. kennedy jr. why i panel including a man fk. wanted to be his vp is an he was trump's former we were in fixer. now, michael cohen is expected to testify against his old boss. will we hear any new bombshells from this key player witness testimony in the trump hush money trial today at nine eastern on cnn i was so excited to buy my first home, but and needed a lot of work done on it. >> i went on to andy. jamie was the first person to call. i explained her some of the things i could do and showed are some pictures. he's resurface my fluorine, he's done plumbing work, he's refinished this beautiful table here. >> would you say that sand it for a week? >> well he didn't with top rated certified pros and over 500 categories. angie can
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>> no kid hungry.org. >> i'm natasha bertrand at the pentagon. and this is cnn rfk jr. is a democrat plant a radical left liberal who's been put in place in order to help crooked joe biden, the worst president in the history of the united states get re-elected. so republicans get it out of your mind that you're going to
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vote for this guy because he's conservative, he's not i'll come back to the state of the union that was former president donald trump going after independent presidential candidate robert. >> robert f. kennedy jr. my panel is here now. i mean scott jennings the idea that he didn't just send out something britain, he sat in front of a camera and said to camera what he just said. i mean, it's an item in a tell it's like a megaphone saying he is concerned. >> yeah. well, as you mentioned he mentioned he's not a conservative and i think that trump people are thinking it's going to be easy to recover some of those folks who current probably tell pollsters their with rfk because he has been a fringe liberal lunatic for most of his life. and there's an audience in american politics, maybe small, but there's an audience who believes there's a conspiracy for everything. i mean, the other people out there who believed that the stop sign in their neighborhood was put there by the rothschild, the getty's, and colonel sanders does that mean
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that's the group. and he needs to recover those people and they're easy to get when you consider what rfk has said during the course of his career, this an easy thing for them to do, to close that door welcome former senator scott brown. tell me about your friends with rfk jr. tell me about his intriguing to you to be his running mate. >> well, he asked me to be his vice presidents. certainly it's something i considered. i think respectfully, scott, i think he's smart, intelligent, obviously, has very passionate. you may not agree with them, but he believes why do you say no it's not it's not we have so many differences and i'm a republican, but i wished him well, certainly that being said does a reason why trump and biden are going after him, biden behind the scenes, trying to challenge the ballot access. he's going to have ballot access is the first this question i asked him. you're going to have ballot access is absolutely. he's in michigan, california, michigan, in the last election is 11,000 votes separated them. he's going to
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get way more than 11,000 votes if you're a republican, do you think he's going? let's play spoiler. >> i think it's hard. that's the question. does your depends on the state. i think in michigan, edwards biden quite honestly. and i think it helps trump and other states that may be a little bit different, but he's going to get more than 11,000 votes. so he's going to play, he's pulling it 12%, and he's probably going to be on the debate stage can i just say, as you come in, that i was talking to somebody who's working on the democratic side, tried to stop rfk jr. and the question i had was if trump is worried, where are you so worried? >> and the answer was, we just we don't know how this is going to play out and we're just wanted to him and we want to try to pull votes away no matter where they're comes. sure. 100%. so earlier this week, i mean, the story about the brain worms was very disconcerting, not just because of what he said about what, how it impact is cognitive abilities, which as somebody who has had brain surgery, that
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is a very serious question that americans should get answers to if they're going to make him think they're going to vote for him for president but the fact that his answers shifted three or four times throughout the week, how it showed that they're not ready for prime time. it is not unreasonable to ask that question. and then secondarily, he admitted in interviews this week that he said, yeah, joe biden can't win if i'm in the race. so his motivations are quite clear and he is pandering to that part of the base if he thinks he's getting or the trunk based that he thinks he's getting also said this week, he'd consider pardoning january 6 rioters so again, this is craven politics trying to play for both sides. and i think the trump campaign pain is realizing what we realize quite some time ago. it's unclear. he's probably going to pull from both. >> he doesn't also have a strategy to actually get to two 70. so he may get more than 11,000 votes in michigan, but just winning michigan is not
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enough. to actually win the presidency. you have to have ballot access on enough, in enough states to actually get to two 70 and so the question is if you're at canada and running and you can't get to two 70 then what are you? you are a spoiler alert because you literally can't win the presidency. the other reason why both sides are paying attention to him is because he's inconsistent on his issues but one day he's feeling this way about abortion and the next day feeling that way and so it a media cycle where sometimes it's hard for voters to track all the issues. if you hear one at about them when on one day, you may say this is my guy, but actually, what if you got into office, he would do something totally different first of all, he's going to get more than just one state. >> and obviously it will go house representatives from neither any of the candidates get to the two 70. but people don't like trump or biden in there looking for an alternative and he comes across as authentic as vibrant and may not agree with them, but he sees an alternative to how you
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run a campaign. >> anything i say, but you have to it doesn't matter. >> he's gonna he's gonna be substantial amount of votes. i'm not i'm not disputing that the question is about the trump campaign strategy here. >> he is trump can easily knock this down. >> i'm less certain that biden can knock it down i mean, one of the things rfk did this week was go out and take a extremely its position on abortion and i don't sure biden can go out and refute that. i mean, but trump can go ahead and refute some of the things rfk is doing. and so i think it's just simply easy for trump to get his people back easier than it will be for biden quick on abortion. >> biden can absolutely extreme positions on of course, he's going to take a moderate position sean abortion? no, i said he can easily refute an extremist position on abortion. what rfk said was extremist or we use that. i'm using i'm asking you what you think you're a democrat. what do you think? i think it is inconsistent in that concerns me deeply because this is this is an issue for women in this country right now, where either you understand that a woman
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needs to be able to make that decision, or you think government should. >> and there's no offline on that. >> what he's saying what both thing both things. joe biden on the issue of abortion and then the last two election cycles, 22 and 23 on that listen, we in new hampshire, we did it right. >> wait, we all work together. it's something that i think should be left to the states. and in new hampshire, we have it right? >> before we go we're going to make a hard term, but an important turn. >> i know you wanted to talk about something that is coming up that is near and dear to your heart and something we covered on the show a lot. yeah. >> so brittney griner is book, coming home it was is out this week and she details beautifully, horribly the conditions under which she was held in russia gives a real
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viewpoint into what russia under putin that dehumanization, that she endured, the lack of what it is to live in a tator ship. quite frankly, i just, you know, how she maintained her own humanity, but i think it's a real it's important. i give her so much credit for being willing to dive back into that pain so that we can remember when we're talking about russia and putin and what he wants to do with ukraine. and when he's on the march read that book and understand what life under him would be like. >> thank you for sharing. thank you so much for being here. thank you. thank you. and you to gail until your wife to everybody up next she blazed a trail to become the first woman to lead femur. and it wasn't always easy it was always a balance between demonstrating your competence in your competence with being called the b word, right? >> what do you call it that? many times every weekday
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don't miss out on our fastest speed plans yet! switch to comcast business and get started for $49.99 a month. plus, ask how to get up to an $800 prepaid card. call today! why chimes the number one most loved banking app i'm evan perez and washington. >> and this is cnn welcome back to state of the union after a wave of deadly tornadoes we traveled to oklahoma with female administrator diane chris well, to see the devastation firsthand. >> it's the latest in my series, bad asked women of washington your home is okay and your family this is just
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incredible to see that total destruction along the at the devastating tornadoes that ripped through these rural oklahoma communities. >> well, i'm so sorry that you're going through those it's only grocery store in our county over store. >> and i say, wow we wanted bill. its 20% of rem we traveled with femur administrator diane chris well, to survey the damage from multiple tornadoes hey, those in marietta and sulphur, oklahoma, talking to local officials. >> nice to see you to help assess their needs. do you have any questions for me? >> all right. yeah, i'm sure i will i get it. >> it's a lot right now. >> before chris well, only men ran fhima. you are the 12th fhima administrator. first woman, and the role how does that impact the way that you do your job? you know, when i first was asked to come in and do this job, i didn't really think about it, but i like to
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go back and reflect on the first week that i was here and one of my younger female employees had come up to me after meeting she said a year ago, there were zero women in my chain of command between me and the president of the united states. >> now, there are more women in emergency management at all levels. >> serwer just quickly like what's your biggest concern in oklahoma at chris wells first meeting with state leaders about the tornadoes, women were in charge. >> will they be able to go to school or so much impact that they're not gonna be able to go to swipe so that means that there's children won't have food, correct? i know is i was coming up in my career was always a balance between demonstrating your confidence in your competence with being called the b word right? where you call it that. >> many times to your face? yes. yes. >> and would you say i just pushed forward with this is why i'm doing this. this is why i need to be here. i go back a
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lot to even how i got started. >> she got started as a firefighter. >> i had actually had somebody talked me into joining the military and joining the air national guard because i wanted to go back to college and i didn't really have a mean since i was about to become a single mother at the time, they said that they had bomb loading and firefighting and so i went and i interviewed with both then the bomb loaders looked really bored. the firefighters were having a lot of fun and i said, i'll give that a shot. >> she was only the sixth woman firefighter in aurora, colorado. >> how old are your kids? >> so i was 20 when i joined and so my kids were there were three and five. >> so that must have been hard, just like it is for a single mom. doing lots of different jobs? yes. >> it's a balance right after nine 11 chris well, deployed with the colorado air national guard to kuwait and qatar. we do have this first case of coronavirus. she later managed new york city's emergency
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response there during the darkest days of the covid pandemic nice to see you in person. sorry, it's under these circumstances. >> well, we appreciate your comments. >> her work then n now transcends politics and party there's a disaster and there's people in need. we're all, we're all americans. and that's not thank the administrators attitude. these are federal agencies that we have to work with regardless. so who's in the white house, this kind of a partnership. >> this is absolutely critical to make sure we bring the right people into these communities to help with their specific needs. >> get that this is, this is the building where they had the one loss of life actually looking at this hard to imagine that anybody survived, it's a miracle i know she talks to locals trying to clean up and cope. >> and i'm screaming tornado everyone inside. >> i was screaming, jackson police come in and avoid he's going far live the hardest
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thing i've ever had it it was shut that door and what as fhima director, do you learn when you come to a place like this, that you can't learn on zoom, on a phone call with your deputies who were our here on the ground. >> you can feel that emotion you can't feel the heart. >> eight, why is that so important because it helps me get rid of the red team it helps me break down bureaucracy in order to ensure that it's more than numbers people eliminating red tape at femur has been a top goal for chris. >> well, earlier this year, she succeeded in pushing through the biggest overhaul of the agency's relief programs in two decades. streamlining the process to get helped to
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disaster victims and more money to survivors faster. and i wanted us to really understand what it meant to put people first. this job keeps her constantly on the road, but her other job, a grandmother and mother of two sons, keeps her centered. >> i deployed right after the nine, 11 attacks my orders said for an undetermined amount of time, i always wondered how much that was going to impact them. i remember i brought them with me to my confirmation hearing when they were with me that day. and you can see how proud they were and how successful they have both become it really just gave me a really warm feeling as a mother are thanks to administrator chris. >> well and happy mother's day to her, as well as all the mothers here at state of the union are excellent executive producer. rachael stripe felt producers cassie macnamara, kristie johnson, melissa gmo plus ruby williams, and angelica flores, to my own mother, fancy. i love you so
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friend susanna, his wife of 17 years with all his heart and a father who adored his eight children and 12 grandchildren in recent years, he used his skills and experience as a washington powerhouse to represent families of those killed on september number 11th, the organization, not 11 families united, released a statement. morning, jack and crediting him with helping past the justice against sponsors of terrorism act in 2016 quote, jack had the courage to speak truth to power and fight for what is right? rest peacefully. hero, you will be missed. may his memory be a blessing thank you for spending your sunday morning with us. fareed zakaria gps starts hi, my name is kim and i am 41 years old. i've been given the opportunity to work from home. so that means lots of video calls. i see myself more and i definitely
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