tv Early Start With Christine Romans and Laura Jarrett CNN October 26, 2022 2:00am-2:59am PDT
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for pennsylvania's open senate seat. the first and only face-off between democrat john fetterman and republican mehmet oz quickly spiralled into a series of biting personal attacks. much of the attention leading up to the debate was focused on fetterman's stroke in may and how it might affect his performance. safe to say it did. at times he struggled for words or lost his train of thought. oz did not draw attention to fetterman's trouble. instead he focused on painting fetterman as, quote, extreme using that word over and over. >> john fetterman takes everything to an extreme and those extreme positions hurt us all. >> let's also talk about the elephant in the room. i had a stroke. he's never let me forget that. and i might miss some words during this debate. mush two words together but it knocked me down, i'm going to keep coming back up. >> fetterman especially lost his footing on the subject of fracking when questioned about a
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2018 interview when he said he would never support the industry versus his current position supporting fracking. >> john fetterman calls fracking a stain on pennsylvania. he says that he would sign a moratorium to ban its continued use. he's against pipelines. he supported the vote against the keystone pipeline that ended up shutting it down. he supports biden's desire to ban fracking on public land. >> i do support fracking and i don't -- i don't -- i support fracking and i stand -- and i do support fracking. >> fetterman seemed on firmer ground on the subject of abortion where democrats have focused much of their mid-term attention. oz was asked about a nationwide ban on abortion. >> there should not be involvement from the federal government in how states decide their abortion decisions. as a physician, i've been in the room when there's some difficult
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conversations happening. i don't want the federal government involved with that at all. i want women, doctors, local political leaders letting the democracy that's always allowed our nation to thrive to put the best ideas together to let the states decide themselves. >> if you believe your reproductive freedom belongs with dr. oz, you have a choice. if you believe the choice for abortion stands with you and your doctor, that's what i stand for. roe v. wade for me should be the law. >> let's bring in professor of political science, chris borg. nice to see you this morning. a lot to unpack there. did anyone emerge stronger last night? >> no. it's such a unique circumstance with lieutenant governor fetterman's condition. it's hard to evaluate in a traditional way. certainly the lieutenant governor struggled at times to get his message out.
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he's dealing with a cognitive challenge that's making that difficult for him. and it showed at points. it was hard, i believe, for him to make points that he wanted to. it took some time. on the other hand, i think dr. oz stayed on the message that he has hammered away at in terms of his campaign, that john fetterman is too extreme, too left, he's soft on crime and he was able to keep that repeatedly said during the debate. >> how do you feel dr. oz responded to the abortion question last night? lieutenant governor fetterman has consistently stood by roe versus wade. then you heard dr. oz say i've been in the room when the difficult decisions have been made. i've had difficult conversations and this should not be up to the federal government? >> this is one of the parts where oz struggled somewhat. he's on the defensive.
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he's been hit pretty hard on this throughout the campaign and his answer, i think, left some question marks that featherman campaign is going to follow up on, a statement about it's the person, doctor and the local officials that get to decide this. certainly i think this is one area where his performance wasn't as tight as it was on other areas where he was hammering away at fetterman. >> you talk about how unique this particular time is for these candidates. lieutenant governor fetterman stumbled. we don't know what that means for his competency? >> yeah, that's right. it's hard to see what the evaluation standards would be. he fried to make it clear from the start, acknowledge his health challenge. i believe there is empathy among voters for the challenges that the lieutenant governor has had. they see the back and forth and some struggles the lieutenant
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governor had in making his points. >> christopher, so nice to see you this morning. thanks. >> nice seeing you too. president biden directing the dnc to immediately transfer an additional $10 million to the campaigns of house and senate democrats. he's also offering an additional $8 million through fundraising. that's $18 million for the final push before the mid-terms. the new cash infusion brings the total amount transferred to $27 million. that's a record for the party. congresswoman pramila jayapal now withdrawing a letter to the biden administration urging it to pursue a diplomatic solution to russia's war with ukraine. that letter sparked backlash from fellow democrats who felt blindsided by the move that it was released two weeks before the mid-terms.
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cnn's daniellea diaz explains. >> christine, she issued a statement yesterday, this came after she clarified the letter on monday night that read, quote, the letter was drafted several months ago but unfortunately was released by staff without vetting. as chair of the caucus, i accept responsibility for this. christine, it's interesting. you said that democrats were upset that she issued this letter to president joe biden. some of the democrats that were upset with her signed the letter. there were 30 names on this letter when it was sent to president joe biden on monday. some of them said that if they had known this letter was going to be sent this week, they would have removed their name from this. because this was written in july, that's what sources told me, and it was never sent. there was a miscommunication in jayapal's office where aides including jayapal sent this letter to president biden without notifying the signers.
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many, many of these lawmakers saying, quote, the timing was terrible. it was sent as this war with ukraine and russia amped up. very different circumstances than it was when they wrote the letter in july and it's been edited. another thing, christine, this is two weeks from the mid-terms. there are a lot of moderate democrats fighting for their seats and now discussion -- while it's been in the republican party about whether to continue funding u drain, that discussion is spilling over who have had to qualify their stances about supporting ukraine. these democrats as they fight for the house, they didn't want the discussion to be this two weeks from the mid-terms. >> to use a baseball analogy, unforced error very close to the very big game. thank you so much for that. nice to see you. a fiery debate between new
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york governor kathy hochul and her republican opponent lee zeldin but crime captured the spotlight. >> there is no crime fighting plan if it doesn't include guns, illegal guns. you refuse to talk about how we can do so much more. you didn't even show up for votes in washington when a bipartisan group of enlightened legislators voted for an assault weapon ban. >> unfortunately kathy hochul believes the only crimes being committed are crimes with guns. you have people afraid of being pushed in front of oncoming subway cars. they're being stabbed. >> abortion rights led to another heated exchange. >> you know why nothing changed the day after the dobbs decision? because i'm the governor of the state of new york and he's not. we can talk about policies all you want but let's look at the record very few people in congress who have a more pro
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life record. >> it doesn't matter who the governor was the day of the dobbs decision, it was already passed into law a few years ago. when we woke up the day after the dobbs decision the law in new york was exactly the same as it was the day before. i'm not going to change that. >> hochul's once commanding lead has dwindled to single digits in the latest polls. more than 9.2 million early ballots have been cast. it is still too early to say whether total voter turnout will exceed 2018 with voting habits shifting significantly in recent years. brittain's third prime minister in seven weeks about to face parliament and lay out his plan to stabilize a faultering economy. plus, what could be a bad omen for u.s. economy. google's profits plummeting. cnn on the ground for a
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potential turning point in ukraine. >> we have to get out of here as fast as possible because the russians might target the provisions aftfter they got hity the salvo with our rockets. andd ensure complete withth thirty grams of protein. ♪ age before beauty? why not both? visibldiminish wrinkled skin in just two days. new crepe corrector loon only from gold bond. dry in is sensitive skin, too. and it's natural. treat it that way with aveeno® daily moisture. formulated with nourishing, prebiotic oat. it's clinically proven to moisturize dry skin for 24 hours. aveeno® certified turbocharger, suspension and fuel injection. translation: certified goosebumps. certified from headlamp to tailpipe.
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president biden signed the inflation reduction act into law this afternoon. ok, so what exactly does it mean for you? out of pocket costs for drugs will be capped. for seniors, insulin will be just $35. families will save $2,400 on health care premiums. energy costs, down an average of $1,800 a year for families. and it's paid for by making the biggest corporations pay what they owe. president biden's bill doesn't fix everything, but it will save your family money. okay season 6! aw... this'll take forev—or not. do i just focus on when things don't work, and not appreciate when they do? i love it when work actually works! i just booked this parking spot... this desk... and this conference room! i am filing status reports on an app that i made! i'm not even a coder! and it works!... i like your bag! when your digital solutions work, the world works.
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leaving you feeling instantly dry and confident. welcome back. a pivotal moment for the war in ukraine. the plans for kherson is uncertain. the forces may be digging in but there are other indications they may be preparing to retreat. frederick pleitgen live on the ground in mikolaiv. fred, what do we know about the russians pulling occupying officials out of kherson? what do we think is happening? >> reporter: it's difficult to tell. there's a lot of fighting going on. it's a difficult situation. a lot of people being evacuated.
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this morning, christine, there was an adviser to ukraine's president and he said he believes the russians are bringing in more forces and gearing up for a counter offensive. the ukrainians are the ones on the move. here's what we saw. >> moving to the front in one of the most active areas in the brutal war in ukraine with a rocket artillery team taking aim at vladimir putin's forces. they're called carlson and light trucks with missile pods mounted on the bed. the rockets carry a message of retribution, this one signed on behalf of a fallen soldier. for the wish, it says. >> it's very effective because we can set up quickly, fire, and get away again. now they're aiming at russian positions several miles away.
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russia's artillery is dangerous and could fire back fast. it's not safe, he screams. we have to get out of here as fast as possible because the russians might target this position after they got hit by the salvo from our rockets. their key to accuracy comes from the air. the drone scopes out the target and watches as the artillery hits a russian artillery. >> translator: they make sure the target gets hit. >> reporter: the russians are under such pressure they started evacuating tens of thousands of people from kherson and they believe moscow is making unfounded claims about kyiv preparing to use a so-called dirty bomb because russia's
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troops are pinned down in this area. the commander believes it's only a matter of time before they oust vladimir putin's army from here. >> translator: by the end of the year we believe kherson will be under ukrainian flags. >> reporter: their unit will make a small difference in the battle for kherson. christine, the latest information we have is well over 20,000 people have already been relocated by the russians across the river that their forces are pinned up against. a lot of that comes from the city itself. pretty much all the bridges across the river have been knocked out by ukrainians. logistics difficult for them. that's why they thought the russians might do a complete with withdrawal. now they're saying their information may be different. they're beefing up their forces possibly for some stand around
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the kherson area. >> fred pleitgen for us in mikolaiv. top u.s. forces trying to decipher vladimir putin's threats to use a dirty bomb. they all accuse moscow of trying to create a pretexts of them to use a dirty bomb. here's president biden's new warning to the kremlin. >> let me just say, russia will be making an incredibly serious mistake if it were to use a tactical nuclear weapon. i'm not guaranteeing you it's a false flag operation yet, don't know, but it would be a serious, serious mistake. >> claire sebastian live from london with the latest developments in this scary developments in this story.
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repeating ukraine is preparing to use a tactical nuclear weapon. what's the reaction in the u.k.? >> reporter: pure russian disinformation, christine, were the words of a diplomat in ukraine. there was a closed door meeting that russia is making these claims. they're saying putin's war is built on lies so they are dismissing this as disinformation, as is the u.s., and as you noted other western officials. even nato is saying they've seen this from russia in the past where it accuses someone of doing something or planning to do something only to do it itself. the world is watching closely. the confusion around this, the chaos, that is all part of the russian fabric as well, christine to exert the psychological pressure on western powers to test their
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resolve and support for ukraine. i can tell you the new british prime minister rishi sunak is calling for continuity. the white house vows to keep trying to get brittney griner home after a russian court rejected her appeal. president biden says the administration making every effort to bring the american basketball star and other wrongly detained americans home. >> we are in constant contact with russian authorities to get brittney and others out and so far we have not been meeting with much positive response. >> let's get more from cnn's matthew chance. >> reporter: well, the outcome for brittney griner is not good. she appeared in that courtroom outside of moscow by video
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conference. she didn't appear in person. she made an empassioned plea to the judge to reduce her sentence. she did that for apologizing by what she had done. admitted her guilt but said it was so hard for her, essentially to paraphrase her, to be away from her family and the other people who had committed much more serious crimes had received much, much less of a prison sentence, much reduced sentences. but none of that emotional plea seems to have had any impact on the russian judge. the judge upheld the conviction, guilty verdict for brittney griner for smuggling drugs, essentially, into the country. remember she was caught with a tiny, less than a gram of cannabis oil in her luggage when she came into russia back in february. and he also basically upheld the sentence as well, that we did reduce it a little bit, by a couple of months.
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now she will serve 8 1/2 months. the lawyers on behalf of brittney griner said they are surprised and devastate that had this has happened. they were expecting a much bigger reduction of the sentence. i spoke to them last week actually in moscow and that's what they told me. they're now unfortunately kind of at the end of the road legally. it's not clear whether they'll be able to appeal again to a russian court and so now what happens is that brittney griner will be taken away from her pretrial detention center outside of moscow where she is now and moved to a more permanent location, a penal colony outside of moscow. it could be further away and the conditions in those russian penal colonies leaves much to be desired to say the least. the worst sort of moments for brittney griner are still potentially ahead of us.
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not a good day at all in terms of news for that american basketball star. matthew chance, cnn, london. >> all right, matthew. thank you for that. a student and teacher gunned down in a high school. what a teenage shooter wrote in a letter he left behind. dozens of migrants found in a dump truck in texas. life... doesn't stop for diabetes. be ready for every moment, with glucerna. it's the nber one doctor recommended brand that is scientifilly designed to help manage your blood sugar.
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so let's go. the digital age is waiting. just look around. this digital age we're living in, it's pretty unbelievable. problem is, not everyone's fully living in it. nobody should have to take a class or fill out a medical form on public wifi with a screen the size of your hand. home internet shouldn't be a luxury. everyone should have it and now a lot more people can. so let's go. the digital age is waiting. new details emerging about a shooting at a st. louis high school that left a teacher, tenth grade student and the gunman dead. the shooter had an ar-15 style rifle, more than a dozen high
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capacity magazines and more than 600 rounds of ammunition. the shooter left a note behind. >> quote, i don't have any friends. i don't have any family and i've never had a social life. this was the perfect storm for a mass shooter. >> 61-year-old jean kuska and alexander bell three weeks shy of the 16th birthday were killed. police are not saying how they made access for security reasons. they do say it was not through an official entry point. texas state troopers arresting the driver of a dump truck who they say was trying to smuggle migrants. more than 60 migrants concealed inside the bed of the dump truck when it was inside katola,
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texas. just a couple of hours from now, the third prime minister in seven weeks faces questions in parliament. rishi sunak saying mistakes were made and vowing to bring stability to the country after months of political and economic turmoil. >> i stand here before you ready to lead our country into the future, to put your needs above politics. to reach out and build a government that represents the very best traditions of my party. >> let's go live to london and bring in cnn's bianca nobolo. what kind of reception is he getting? >> he had a missman like, statesman like start. his tone was serious. he was trying not to seem jubilant or too scelebratory.
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he wasn't aelected by the publi, he was appointed. tonally, it was about facing up to the difficulties. being the right man for the job and today he met with his cabinet just about an hour ago. that's been a newly appointed cabinet as of last night. he's been trying to demonstrate with his appointments the fact he's going to back up calls for unity. he's with the right wing of the party, left wing of the party. there's been some controversy after she was sacked last week by the former prime minister for security breach. some suggesting perhaps that was the result of a back room deal. his team assures us that isn't the case. today the most daunting tasks that the new prime minister will face is prime minister's questions which will take place in about an hour and a half. even the most seasoned of leaders of this country say that
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is usually the scariest part of the agenda. the pressure on sunak will be immense. he will be facing 600 lawmakers crowding into the small room with jeering, cheering, boos and applause. he isn't known to be particularly spontaneous or especially charismatic. or commanding a room effectively. he's sometimes criticized as being robotic. this can be a chance to start to define the mime ministerial style and to telegraph to the country and parliament that he's got what it takes to be prime minister but everyone will be watching to see how this goes, christine. >> looking at the u.k. economy, he has nothing but a lot of very hard decisions to make and hard decisions, hard choices to sell to parliament and the british people. thank you very much. nice to see you today.
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todd. >> reporter: in recent days kanye west said this on a podcast. >> the thing about me and adidas, i can literally say anti-semetic [ bleep ] and they can't drop me. >> reporter: they have indeed dropped him. adidas has partnered with him for nine years. adidas says it will take a hit of more than $240 million to fourth quarter sales by cutting ties. >> i wish it had happened sooner but this does send a strong statement when you express antisem mainetism and any form of hate. >> on october 8th he said he was going def-con 3 on jews. for a man who's won 24 grammy
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awards and has been a trendsetting fashion mogul, how big a fall from grace is this? >> zero to 10, this is 11. this is as extreme as it gets. the real problem is he's crossed over moral lines with hate speech, anti-semitism. >> one danger is that his audience is young and impressionable. another is the current political and social climate in america. >> it's a platform in the context of a post 2020 america with everything that we know that's going on in terms of hate crimes, in terms of anti-semitism, racism. we're in a climate that's very, very tense. >> reporter: in recent days they appeared to show support for wests anti-semetic remarks by hanging banners over a freeway. >> it was a dangerous thing for kanye to do at a time when the danger facing jewish people is all too real. >> reporter: this post by jerry seinfeld's wife jessica getting
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likes online. going beyond upsetting the jewish people. he suggested george floyd died from a fentanyl overdose. can west reverse any of this and make a comeback? the apology tour hasn't been convincing. he told an interviewer he was sorry for the hurt the def-contour made. his ex-wife made a statement criticizing hate speech but only after she was called out for not addressing west's behavior earlier. one damage control says this. >> these are his real thoughts. there's no coming back from this. if these are the result of a mental health condition, i think that is a mitigating factor. >> there is speculation his behavior could be a result of a mental health issue. he's had a diagnosis of bipolar
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disorder. the worst flooding in nigeria. larry modello is live on the ground in nigeria. >> this is a reality. this is the capitol in southern nigeria. they've been living through this for weeks. the warning is that in four other states in nigeria there could be more rainfall which is the water levels could dry. already hundreds of thousands of people in the state alone across nigeria more than 1 p.5 million people. it's affecting 33 out of 36 states. it's causing more intense rainfall. infrastructure and a dam. they don't like that. they're getting disadvantaged
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because they feel it's a result of negligence. here in this city, imagine philly, oregon completely underwater. businesses, homes completely submerged. we have seen in this city. some residents have seen bodies floating in these waters. people are making due with it because they feel the government is not coming to their aid. they're using this little three seater, three-wheeled car to get around. across the street it's submerged. that's a reality and not just here at the state capitol. it remains cut out for most of nigeria. they feel it could get worse. look at this water, christine, it's really black. it's a mixture of oil, fecal matter. all sorts of impurities. one of the fears here is cholera, other water-borne diseases. >> reality.
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stay safe. thank you for your reporting, larry. google not immune to recession fears. the company's weak earnings and what they could mean next. children's hospitals overwhelmed with respiratory illness on the rise. now ports can n know where evey piece of cargo is. and where it's going. (dock worker) right on time. (vo) robots can predict breakdowns and order their own replacement parts. (foreman) nice work. (vo) and retailers can get ahead of the fashion n trend of the day with a new line tomorrow. with a verizon private 5g network, you can get more agility and security. giving you more control of your business. we call this enterprise intelligence. from the network america relies on. (bridget vo) with thyroid eye disease... i hid from the camera. and i wanted to hide from the world. for years, i thought my e.d was beyond help... ...but then i asked my doctor about tepea. (vo) tepezza is the only medicine at treats t.e.d. at the source not just the symptoms.
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all right. your romans numeral this morning, 27 as in a 27% drop in profit. a big earnings miss for google's parent company alphabet. a bad omen for digital spending amid worrying about the global economy, rising inflation rates. online advertising slowed. advertisers cutting back on ad spending. on wall street stock index futures leaning a little bit lower this morning. the third straight day of gains. the dow closed higher. the dow at a six-week high. more evidence rising interest
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rates are cooling the housing market. a record slowdown in august home prices. the largest deceleration. home prices are rising but not as fast. gas prices fell overnight at $3.76 a gallon. asia slightly higher finding stability after two quick days. european markets narrowly mixed here. want to bring in kahne -- cnn global marketer. stocks have rebounded. the dow up 10%. still down dramatically for the year but there has been a bounce in october. there are so many headwinds, rana.
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still high inflation. fed jacking up interest rates. what are we to make of this moment? >> you know, it's funny, christine. sometimes bad in the real economy can be good news for stocks. let me unpack that. you mentioned earlier starting to see a little bit of cooling off in the housing market. consumer confidence has dipped. the fed is doing its work. the rate hikes people feel are starting to cool the economy off and that means that investors think the fed may actually start to slow down, pull back a little bit on some of the rate hikes which will be good for stocks. it's kind of bizzaro world where stocks go up when things seem to feel not so great on main street. >> meantime, the recession obsession continues. we see jamie dimon for months now. then at a big conference in saudi arabia, he said a
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recession would be manageable and it's not his biggest worry. listen. >> a lot of stuff on the horizon, which is bad and could, doesn't necessarily, but could put the united states in a recession. that's not the most important thing for what we think about. we'll manage right through that. i would worry much more of the geopolitics of the world. i think the geopolitics with russia, ukraine, america, china, the relationships of the western world. that would have me far more concerned than a milder, slightly severe recession. >> the underpinnings of the global order are shifting. cheap interest rates, that's going away. cheap labor from all over the world doesn't make sense. cheap energy from russia, that's going away. it's a really global moment here. >> it really is. the world is not flat. that's what i'm looking at in my
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book. this period is transitory. we're getting through it. we're getting into a world that's a little less global, a little more local. all of those really highly complex supply chains between the u.s. and china. many have been going to china have thought, you know, not so sure they're going to be stable when there's a crisis. now i take dimon's point. one thing i'm really concerned about is what if there were an incident in taiwan. what is the day one plan? what is the day two plan? that's something the administration is trying to sort out but we don't yet know and businesses don't often know where all their supply chain risk lies. >> rana, the new book, thank you. nice to see you, vrana. >>
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. all right. things got chippy between the warriors and the suns ending up with klay thompson ejected for the first time in his nba career. coy wire has the bleacher report. what happened? >> drama, drama, christine. emotions running high. the defending champs taken past the boiling point. draymond green thought he was fouled. goes down hard. the referee shows draymond that t technical foul early in the
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third. coach steve kerr agreed. he, too, would get a technical. klay thompson gets into it with suns star devin booker. thompson gets called for a technical and then for the first time in his career, christine, 796 games, he's ejected. escorted off the floor. as he's saying bye-bye, he points to the ring, all four of them. seven technicals. most in the quarter. more than a quarter century. warriors are blown out by 29 points. devin booker says afterwards he has nothing but love for klay thompson. >> i love klay thompson and i have from the beginning, you know, from the drafts, i said i want to be klay thompson. that doesn't excuse us from competing against each other and messing with each other. i don't have a problem with it. big fan of his and his competitive nature and that's that. >> nfl now, the league says two game officials seen in the viral
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video interacting with mike evans were not asking for his autograph. the league issued a statement clearing them of any wrongdoing. the incident centered around the side judge asking evans for his phone number so he could pass it along to a golf pro for lessons for evans. the nfl would not confirm nor deny that. evans was asked about that yesterday. here he is. >> i wasn't signing my autograph, i'll tell you that. i talk to a lot of officials. we're all human beings. he's a nice guy. we just talking about gov, that's all we talking about. >> finally, when golden knights forward took the ice in san jose, it was his 990th consecutive game, christine. a new nhl record. his run goes all the way back to november 3rd, 2009. the entire arena giving the
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35-year-old a standing ovation. kessel also scored his 400th career goal. kessel didn't even miss a game, christine, when his daughter was born in march. he took one shot on goal, skated off the ice and went to be home with his family. phil kessel, two-time stanley cup champ. before this started he overcame cancer, test particular call lar cancer and then this 13 year streak. >> that is some dedication. all right. nice to see you, coy wire. >> you, too. >> thanks for joining me. i'm christine romans. "new day" starts right now . but he's raising mine and yours. they're extreme positions, out
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