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now, and you'll receive a bottle of vitamin d3 of yoon support absolutely free doctors preferred better science, better results i'm zachary cohen in washington in this is cnn closed, captioning brought to you by mesobook.com if you or a loved one have mesothelial not we'll send you a free book to answer questions you may have called and we'll come to you 808 to one 4,000 turmoil as pro-palestinian protests a boiling point at colleges nationwide. we are seeing violent clashes with police. hundreds of arrests suspensions, even expulsions. >> we're following the very latest plus for a six-week abortion ban kicks in and democrats sound off the white house seizing on the new law to slam republicans and former president trump and forcing a
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vote. republican congresswoman marjorie taylor greene on vales her plan to oust speaker mike johnson. but here's the thing. she doesn't have support from her own party or from democrats to do that following these major developing stories and many more all coming in right here to cnn news central we are following breaking news as protests have grown increasingly confrontational on college campuses this was the scene at the university of wisconsin earlier today officers there you see officers, they are in riot gear. they were removing an encampment of protesters, at least 12 people arrested in this case, including several who resisted arrest according
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to police. and then in new york police just releasing these new images from inside columbia university, they show the aftermath that hamilton hall after police were called in last night to help clear out the protesters who had occupied that building and then refuse to leave around 300 people were arrested and the new york police are now saying that it may deploy more than a dozen offices on that campus through graduation and then this over at ucla and los angeles protesters and counter protesters clashing overnight. and the lapd was called in police do remain on campus at this hour? first, let's bring in cnn's whitney wilde, who is on the university of wisconsin campus whitney, what are you seeing there well, right now, hours after that believes confrontation, we've seen this protest to grow back to dozens, if not hundreds of students here at the university for sunday of wisconsin. >> right now, i'm on the library mall. this is pretty much the center of campus and as you can see, even after that
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police action, tense, we're going back up. so we spoke with one student earlier today who was here when that police confrontation happened. she said she's a modern mediators. you race down here, what you saw was that groups of students sort of encircled by police as they were pushing their way in. and let's take a look at these orange tense. this is what was left after that police confrontation. so most of this was actually cleared during that police confrontation and then police left during that confrontation, there were around 30 arrests according to the nerve city wisconsin's chancellor statement that went out a few minutes ago, most students at that time chose to leave. and the reason that police felt and the school felt like it was important to move in was because they say that there's an explicit ban on camping at the university of wisconsin madison that they were obligated to basically enforce the code that bans can camping. so again, these few orange tents were all that was left after that, please confrontation. that was hours
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ago in that time, a lot of tents have gone back up. this is a very calm, very peaceful protest at this time but certainly students are concerned that there may be more police action. we don't know if that is going to happen embedded certainly something that students are asking and wondering about. i spoke with that mediator earlier today about how she felt about what she saw. and here's what she said. >> i was raised to be anti-war. i was raised to be pro peace and it's not a jewish versus muslim issue. it's not the jews aren't doing anything wrong. it's the leaders in israel or doing things wrong. they're bombing gaza there is still a law enforcement presence there are five law enforcement officers at just off here. as you can see, there's still walking around it is not clear if they're planning to move back in again. but as you can see, the school says that there's a ban on camping and it continues back
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to you all right. uh, whitney, thank you for that. >> let's go to gabe cohen, who is live at columbia university and gave the mare in new york. eric adams is now blaming knots students, but outside agitators for the unrest at columbia, tell us what you know about this every on as you can hear around me, there's approach yes, that has started here in the last few minutes. >> is the same organizers who have been involved in the protests over the past couple of weeks that ultimately culminated in the nypd coming onto campus at the request of the school last night arresting more than 200 people. you ask about those outside agitators that the mayor claims are leading a lot of the efforts as part of those protests. i interviewed one of the protesters who was handcuffed last night, just outside of hamilton hall where we're standing. >> she told me that is a law that she is a student here at columbia, a grad student. she
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says, the vast majority of the people that she has been in contact with her fellow protesters are also affiliated with columbia. we just heard a press conference here, led by faculty of columbia, who are extremely critical. the administration and the president of the school saying that they should never have called in the nypd that they were not negotiating in good faith with the protesters, and they claim what happened last night was police brutality. we are seeing a lot of signs. you can see he criticizing should be the president of the school as well as signs. that's a cops off our campus. clearly, the message is that last night and the nypd's actions did not end the protests action here at columbia. so we'll see what the coming hours bring here to be clear, this is a peaceful protests were on a public sidewalk. i do want to show you walk while glover, where we are standing there were a lot of nypd officers here, just a few minutes ago when you can see they're standing by this is happening in public. it is peaceful, but they have been
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called in by columbia and they will remain here you may 17 after graduation to maintain order as the school and the city has put it and the mayor of new york claiming that those young people are being radicalized. >> he said, bye, bye professionals, gabe cohen there at columbia university thank you very much. let's set out to la where cnn's stephanie elam is on the campus of ucla. stephanie, those scenes that we saw overnight on that campus where someone the most violent and dramatic that we've seen during these weeks of protest at universities. a full-on clashes between pro-palestinian protesters and then counter protesters in the pre-dawn hours or so. what's the latest yeah. closer to midnight. local time. alex obviously, if a much different theme now, much calmer here. classes have been canceled by ucla. they just put that message out recent but you can see the effects of what has happened here last night when we got here, there was just still the tension was here.
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there was chanting, there was people going up against the police officers who made a line and push people out and just been fenced in this area where we saw those clashes happening last night. this is that grass where you saw that and you see now since 9:00 a.m. local security has come back out here. they were out there last night two and then securities further up there and more law enforcement from different agencies are out here. >> what has been interesting though, is what did happen last night. >> and i talked to a woman, felicia ford who is a native, loss and a native of los angeles. she felt compelled to get out here last night. she said she got out here shortly around midnight and this is what she says. she saw but i just saw that these are young students going to school they're protesting for cause. >> but the people that i saw and that i understood were the people that didn't go to school here there will causing the blood violence that they
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were committing here. pipes, mace this a couple of people had knives and she says, i actually watched her in the middle of the night pulling people apart, getting in the middle of people keeping them away from the law enforcement line. and as you can see, she's been out here all night. she still out here and she's the only person out here. who's cleaning up the campus, but she says he's basically team human that she wants to make sure that people are treating each other right? while the situation got very tense last night. >> wow, that is something saying stephanie. thank you so much for bringing that to us. we appreciate it. stephanie elam there at ucla, joining us now, is jewish student and pro-palestinian protest or benjamin kersten and he's a graduate student at ucla. he's a member of the school's chapter of jewish voice for peace benjamin, we do want to note as we're talking about what happened overnight, you were not there when the violence broke out. is we understand. but tell us about your reaction to what happened
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absolutely. >> i'm in regular touch with people on the ground and was following in supporting from afar as best i could around ten, 30, or 11 i think what can only be described as a zionist militia descended upon being encampment throwing fireworks and other projectiles using bear spray canisters, which have been found around and trying to rip rip apart the barricade and forced their way in and this is a really horrifying escalation of what's been a regular presence of counter protesters and outside agitators at this encampment, which once again is calling on the ucs to divest from their complicity in a genocide it's killed over 34,000 people. >> benjamin, i just want to ask you about that. he said, you said a militia and we're seeing a lot of violence here. you also mentioned outside agitators explain to us as you see this a militia being armed but how do you see a distinction between? students
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non-students at those who may be coming from outside of the community, explain that to us. >> yeah. thanks. there may certainly there they're outside groups that have coordinated a presence on campus to come up and at agitate against the encampment. these include the israeli american council stand with us, the united jewish coalition they may have connections, two groups on campus, but by enlarge, these do seem like folks who are unaffiliated. several of them from what i saw, a regular presence is based on certain identifying features and flags that i've seen carried several times over last few days yeah. i'm very proud of the students here this is a student-led activist effort that is remaining principled and clear-eyed about the stakes which or that for us here are the risks that we face are very little compared to what palestinians facing gaza wherever university has been decimated benjamin can also
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press a little bit on that term that zionist militia, i mean, as a jewish student, what are you calling zionism, if not the right for israel to exist? >> what do you think that what are you protesting here? what are, what are the people out there protesting again? >> yeah. thanks so much. as as a student of jewish history, i think one thing we need to be very incisive about is how we make distinctions between jewish and israeli and dynasts. and of course these things bleed together i understand the political zionism that is dominant to be a settler colonial all political ideology that has sought to establish a jewish ethno state in historic palestine. and that's resulted in massive amounts of material harm. well before the nakba dozen palestinians were displaced in 1948 and continuing of course, up to the current genocide, that's being carried out with us funding.
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and weapons and political cover it talked to us about you're looking for divestment. so tell us what you want there. if you're having what you're hearing from the university if anything, and if you think it is realistic, what you're asking for, if you think that that's anything that the university would see you on yeah. >> thanks so much. you know, i mean, my first response to that is to say that student pressure on universities to divest from conditions of apartheid has worked in the past and it will work again with sustained pressure the ucs chiefly thirds asset manager, blackrock, has funds that are tied up in companies like northrop grumman and help it systems that make technologies that militarized, say the us, mexico border, but are touted as being field-tested on palate justinian's. and so as students in the united states and at us institutions we are refusing our complicity in this
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latest escalation of violence. so we need, we need binding policies toward more justin democratic investment principles. on the part of unit of the university and that means getting all funds out of weapons manufacturing companies that are complicit in the israeli genocide occupation, and apartheid. and also adhering to the guidelines of the academic boycott of israel benjamin, what do you think would happen to israel if they didn't have defense, defensive systems. and i understand you know, certainly some of the issues that you are taking with israel and civically are very opposed to the war in gaza. but when it comes to israel's defense, and its use of obviously some military assets. i mean, what, what do you think would happen without those? >> sure you yeah it's a complicated question and i feel that my position as someone in the united states is really to
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figure out my own, my own complicity and to use my positionality as a jew in the united states to argue against us involvement here as a member liter of jewish voice for peace, the values that we abide by our equality, justice, and dignity for all without exception and i think that, that world remains possible i think that there are real questions we have to ask around what we're what we're calling defense. i mean, once again, i look at what's taking place with genocide and for starvation and if i vendor just iran i mean, what, what do you think would happen without is i understand your opposition to the war and we've seen obviously some horrible things. but what do you think israel would do without? >> defenses in the region and i'm talking about iran
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specifically. i mean, what do you think would happen yeah. >> thanks. you know, i mean, i think that we i think we need? to be doing everything we can to push for ceasefire in de-escalation on all i'd like on the part of all parties involved i think that part of what's in taking place regionally is a result of israel's policy toward, toward palestinians benjamin, thank you so much. >> obviously, we're keeping a very we're close eye on what is happening there at ucla and we appreciate your time today. thank you thank you in the meantime, secretary of state antony blinken meeting today with israeli prime hi minister benjamin netanyahu as the us seeks to pressure hamas to accept a new ceasefire and hostage deal, the secretary says there has been meaningful progress in getting aid into gaza well, there is a new report from doctors without borders that says, quote, deliberate deprivation. there
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could lead to tens of thousands of non trauma-related deaths from starvation and a lack of medical care. >> the ministry of health in gaza says that israel's bombardment apartment has killed now more than 34,000 people since the war started following the october 7 terror attack in israel the ministry does not distinguish, we should note between casualties of civilians and fighters in that data which cnn cannot independently verify. for more, let's go to cnn's paula hancocks in abu dhabi. so paula, what can you tell us about what's happening in gaza against the backdrop of these protests? >> well, i'll make some briana suddenly what we are seeing is the humanitarian crisis continuing, we are seeing more aid trucks getting into the area itself for an interestingly, the secretary of state visited kerem, shalom today, one of the land crossings into gaza, so that he could get a briefing on exactly what the issues are and why. so
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little has been getting in over the months so we have heard that last month, there were more trucks that got in since october itself that coming from unrwa, but they also so say that still it is woefully inadequate. the amount that's getting in and the un is warning that fears of starvation disease are increasing. now we heard also from doctors without borders medicine, some frontieres saying that they believed that there is an issue also with silent killers which they refer to the decapitated health system. in raffa, in parts of gaza pretty much all of gaza. that's when you do fall ill or when you are wounded by the bombing. >> it is inevitably going to lead to worse injuries or in some cases, deaths saying that there really is not a chance of survival in all the necessary
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conditions for survival are absent in raffa. now this is the part in the southern part of gaza, of course, where the israeli military told many, hundreds of thousands of people to move to, and it's where much of the aid has been coming in. so if the situation is that diet in the safe, we can only imagine what it is like in the north, but it all ties in to what we see with these hostage deal which secretary blinken has effectively said today a is the best that hamas is going to get and hamas should accept it so that they can be a ceasefire in gaza. and so that humanitarian aid can get to those who desperately needed it is obviously a desperate situation. paula hancocks from abu dhabi. thank you for that. and ahead, vice president harris heading to florida just hours after the states trick new abortion ban went into effect. but will the white house strategy to blame former president from for these restrictions resonate with voters and after weeks of
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threats public and marjorie taylor greene just unveiled her plan to try to oust speaker mike johnson. >> but is this whole vote going anywhere fast today with us we're, here to get your sayyed of the store fairs bribery prostitution. why do we keep ending up here? >> you can't write this stuff yeah, night it states of scandal with date tapper. >> now streaming on macs with armor all a little bit of this protects you from a lot of that honore west work more clean by $20, get five back through may 31st from friends coming over to mom's coming over so many ways to save life, ready wallet, happy, but 3655 whole foods market kinda riva support
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>> it's duck, we help people customize and save hundreds on car insurance with liberty mutual the situation sure i can maybe. >> right now, you get a free foot locker up weight just by nf foot login to add to get one free, just scan the qr code and enter promo code fal fogbow. it only worked on hello to saturday screen budding. you still got a landline in your house auto noun to some way out i'm dr. sanjay gupta. and this is cnn florida now has one of the most restrictive abortion laws in the nation as of today, the state's six-week ban is now in effect. >> and of course, the sixth week the point of a pregnancy is before many women, even realize that they're pregnant, a new cnn pulling out today shows how americans are feeling about abortion laws nationwide. nearly two years after the supreme court overturned roe v. wade, rolling back federal abortion rights, the polling
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found a two-thirds majority of americans, 65% oppose the decision. and if you go ahead and break this down by party, nearly all democrats disapprove. and so do a large swath of independent voters. now when it comes to how americans feel about abortion laws in their own state, a little less than half, say the laws are currently about right? but in the states where abortion is currently banned, more than half of adults between the ages of 18 and 44 think that their state abortion laws are too restrictive. cnn's pulling also found a majority of voters are unhappy with president biden's handling of abortion policy, although his approval grows 2602 two among those who want to see abortion access protected nationally, nearly half of americans, 49% want to see federal lawmakers protect access to abortion nationwide. and most americans say they believe that biden will work to enact national laws ensuring
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access to abortion if he's reelected, while a majority say they think trump will be leave abortion laws to the states if he wins in an interview, that trump's is did with time magazine, that's exactly what he suggested could happen. he was asked about if he would veto a republican proposed bill saying the right to life extends to the the moment of fertilization. he said, quote, i don't have to do anything about vetos because we now have it back at the states. >> what is clear though, is that abortion is going to be a factor in the 2024 election. >> you probably already see that, but we're knowing it. here, 55% more than half of voters say abortion is one of several factors that will be affecting who they choose at the poles and for nearly a quarter of americans, it is going to be a decisive factor. they say that they will only support a candidate who shares their views on abortion. alex. >> thanks, brennan. and as that six-week abortion law in florida goes into effect, the vice president kamala harris, is set to blame these strict two bands squarely on the
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former president donald trump in just about an hour, harris will be speaking at a campaign event about what's at stake in the november election four reproductive rights. are mj lee, cnn senior white house correspondents live in jacksonville. so mj, what more do we know about what the vice presidency? we're going to say today will alex, as you just said, there is a new reality starting today for women and families in the florida most abortions are now banned here after six weeks of pregnancy, and that is precisely why vice president kamala harris is headed here to jacksonville, florida you're told she is going to explicitly blamed former president donald trump not only for the overturning of roe v. >> wade back in 2022 before the variety of abortion bans and restrictions, including the one here in florida that we have seen go into effect across the country according to excerpts that were shared by the biden campaign, the vice president is going to refer to this ban as another trump abortion ban. and
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we expect her to say, quote, the extremists who wrote this fan don't eat even know how a woman's body works, or they just don't care. now the vice president's visit comes just one week after president biden came to tampa, florida the last week were the exact same reason of drawing attention to the issue of reproductive rights of course, this is an issue that the biden campaign has said over and over again. they believe can galvanize voters and also just drum up enthusiasm in including an a seat like florida, which of course former president donald trump won in both 2016 and 2020. >> and mj in that interview that trump just did with time magazine, he said it should be up to the states to decide whether to prosecute women who have an abortion and he left the door open two states, even monitoring women's pregnancies to identify women who have had abortion procedures in states where it's, where it's banned house the biden campaign reacting yeah, this is definitely something that we expect the vice president to address onstage today as well.
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donald trump was asked by time magazine whether he is comfortable with the idea of states punishing women who get abortions and places where they are not allowed to get them. he said, it's not up to me. it is really up to this states. we expect that the vice president will say that these comments show that are under donald trump, it would be fair game for women to be monitored and punished by the government they. also saw a president biden responding to these comments from the former president in a video message to take a listen after bragging about overturning roe and saying women should be punished for access you reproductive health care. >> he said states should be able to prosecute women and appears perfectly fine was signing a national ban that would take away ivf access there seems to be no limit to how invasive trump would lead to stay be an alex if i could just make a quick point about duvall county, which is where we are. this is a county that president biden won in 2020. he was the first democratic
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presidential candidate to win this county jimmy carter in 19 since of course they were able to do that in part by turning out the black vote something that of course they're hoping to replicate across the board in november alex marquardt, mj lee, with the vice president in jacksonville, florida. thanks very much. i'm jay. >> we continue to follow the breaking news at college campuses there's all across the country dramatic scenes playing out from coast to coast as police have clashed with protesters were falling. all of it falling, all of it stay with us a florida man is hospitalized, infected with anthrax sunday this became the bureau's number one crying too. >> so how would really happen with jesse l. martin's sunday at nine on cnn? >> right now, you get a free foot locker sap. wait, just buy it at foot locker get the app and get one free. just scan the qr code and enter promo code fal fogbow. it only worked on the other side of the screen buddy, you still got a landline or your house or noun to subway
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president biden will deliver the keynote noted ross at the us holocaust memorial museum's annual days of remembrance ceremony on may 7th the announcement comes as protests grow on college campuses over how israel is prosecuting its war against hamas. and some of these protests are growing tense. this happened overnight. we saw it into today as well. this was the scene earlier at the university of wisconsin in madison police clashing with protesters removing tents from that encampment and other items as well. >> then there's video from ucla. this was it's earlier this morning. it shows counter demonstrators attacking that pro-palestinian encampment on campus. police were called as that violence escalated. and this happened just hours after police entered new york's columbia university to clear out pope pro-palestinian protesters who had taken over a building called hamilton hall are cnn's senior national
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security analysts, juliet khiam joins us now. juliette, i want to get your take on what happened in new york last night, we saw the nypd move in a pretty heavy-handed way. they set up a perimeter. they had tactical teams at multiple entry points around campus. we saw so, i'm climbing over a vehicle, i believe take to get into a window and there were some 300 arrests. what did you make of that obviously it's not ideal to get to the situation means that things escalated out of control. >> but the decision to move forward and then ultimately what we saw last night was the best outcome and a really bad situation because of course, when we started watching this, those of us who are older are thinking about kent state and the whatever you think about the student protesters, whether you like them or not no one wants to see violence or any injuries to even when protesters who have taken over
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a building. so i talked to people at the university. i've worked with people who work with the university. i've got family ties to the university. and i think what is what what is the good news coming out of this is that the police came in with really, i think clearly de-escalation patient in mind than they the first thing they asked was for the students to disperse a, we saw people leaving these students. a lot of them don't want to get arrested. so that the core of people that they had to deal with, it's a couple of hundred, but it wasn't thousands and that's good news now they know who the core is. they are going to determine whether they are affiliated with the school, are they affiliated with other schools or people who were just trying to make a point using columbia. i think the big question now is what happens next? the satisfying for those of us who know the university or any of these universities is, is we're not talking about them for what they're good for, but, but things like this. and so stabilizing university, making sure it's secure for
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graduation and the parents who want to come. and then then this summer, figuring out ways in which you're not having these clashes in terms of protests, giving students access to the ability to protest, but also engaging them were finding that that does work at other universities like brown, like northwestern, and others that we've seen that have been able to deescalate these protests. >> every university situation is different. i wonder what you thought as you were looking at you ucla overnight, it was actually quite early in the morning here, east coast time. but you saw a lot of violence erupting between the two sides of this protest. it's hard also, juliet to tell are these all college students? people come from outside the campus, who is who it's really hard to figure that out into know exactly why people are there. but what did you think watching
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this? >> yeah. >> so i was shocked. i grew up in the shadows of ucla. i know the campus, i know exactly where this is. you can't secure ucla in terms of access controls and you might be able to as a smaller liberal arts school. but you can certainly protect an encampment and the protesters, and that is a completely legitimate use of law enforcement. the protesters all right not to be beaten up. and if people come in and whether they are affiliated with a group or they're just people who liked violence for sport, which it looks like a lot of this is, and our claiming to represent a viewpoint protecting the protesters is one of the reasons why protocols it's for safety and security worse, are so necessary. now and in the earlier stages of this, but i was surprised for two reasons. one is the vulnerability of the protesters, whatever you think of them, no one, no one
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deserves this. and how long it took to realize that you had a safety incident. but the second is ucla had handled this very well until then. they hadn't they didn't have the big protests that we had seen. they'd really had i think what you might cause are legitimate. protests, including including the tenants juliette. thank you so much. yeah. it's been great getting your perspective as you take a look at what we're seeing on these various college campuses. thank you i'm. >> republican congresswoman marjorie taylor greene says that she's moving forward and that she's going to force a vote to oust house speaker mike johnson a big range of members from within the gop immediate healy pushed back on that. we're going to talk more about this coming up. we're live from the hill every weekday good morning. cnn's five things has what you need to get going with your day. it's the five essential stories of the morning in five minutes or uastreaming weekdays
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order to go too fast, it.com to take our free financial wellness quiz today. >> i'm melanie zanona in washington, and this is cnn we. >> have new development on capitol hill sources telling cnn house republican leaders are planning to kill a motion by congresswoman marjorie taylor greene to oust speaker mike johnson. today, green announced that she's going to force a vote to remove him next next week i think every member of congress needs to take that vote. >> and let the chips fall where they may and so next week, i am going to be calling this motion to vacate. >> absolutely. calling it. >> i can't wait to see democrats go out and support a republican speaker and have to go home. >> do they? they're primaries and have to run for congress again, having supported a republican speaker of christian conservative, i think that'll play well. i'm excited about it. >> let's get up to capitol hill and cnn's someone's are 40 something. what are you
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hearing in terms of reaction from lawmakers yeah. marjorie taylor greene, alex, you heard there she'd forward with her plan she says that she will bring this motion to vacate to the floor at some point. >> next week. and at that press conference is morning, she stressed that she's doing women so because she wants to get each and every member on the record for that, but the reality of this effort is that it will not succeed and that's because of that inefficient announcement yesterday bay house democratic leadership saying that they will an essence kill this resolution and save speaker johnson and voting was some republican kids here. and the reality is that many republicans in their conference or not in support of what our colleague is doing. here's what my colleague, manu raju collected from this morning on capitol hill hearing from after marjorie taylor greene said that she's pushing forward with this effort disagree with that you had every right to do it, but it's not i wish you wouldn't do that. >> but that sand here, we got
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more important things to work on instead of that, i bless her heart i think this is all about wanting more attention and not producing actual results for the people who represented is a question that deserves an answer and it deserves an answer with a recorded vote, not in the press now you heard that loss karen, who's been there, congressman davidson. >> he said that he will vote to advance the motion to vacate. he potentially is one of only a handful of republicans as we believe that taylor greene has a supportive here as she pushes forward to this. now we know, according to sources that republican leaders, they want to move very quickly to kill this potentially even the same day that she brings us up at some point next week, of course, alex and brianna, republican leaders here want to put this all in the distance behind them. >> bless her heart. that was one of the most loaded. bless her heart. the senate bless your heart, sunlen, but i actually mean it capitol hill,
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former president donald trump is on his way to the key swing state of wisconsin as he makes his first campaign appearance since his trial in new york for those hush money charges began. >> we're live on the campaign trail. that's just ahead the assignment with body cornish. >> listen wherever you get your podcasts from tried and true to try something new. so many ways to save life, ready wallet, happy. that's 3605 by whole foods market, businesses go further with 5g solutions. that's why they choose t-mobile for business. pga of america and t-mobile partnering on 5g powered analytics to help improve player performance t-mobile's network helps aaa stay connected nationwide. we give their members back the row and las vegas grand prix chose t-mobile to help fuel operations for one of the world's largest racing events
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criminal trial. he's heading to campaign and key swing states. mission chicken and wisconsin. >> and in wisconsin is where we find cnn's alayna treene, who was live and walker shot. so alayna, it has been weeks since he's campaigned because he's been in the courtroom most days how is he balancing having to be in court with also having to campaign for president you know, it's really interesting. >> alex and brianna because when i've spoken to many people close to the former president, they actually tell me there's they haven't seen donald trump on the campaign in trail as much as they had anticipated. and i remember talking to a lot of donald trump's advisers in the leadup to the trial and they had said, on those days that were not in court, of course, it's only three days a week, wednesday, saturdays, and sundays that he is not required to be in the courtroom. they said that he was going to be aggressively hitting the ground in some of these key states. as you mentioned, this is the first time we're really seeing him do that since the trial started and that's not entirely his fault. the week before last he wanted to hold a rally in north north carolina that was canceled at the 11th
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hour due to severe storm weather, but all to say he hasn't been out here on the trail as much as possible now, i do think the fact that he's coming he wisconsin wearing here where i am now and then michigan later, that really underscores how critical the trump campaign views these two states he lost or he won these states in 20 hey 16, but lost them to joe biden in 2020. and his campaign really does believe that they have a shot to win these once again, come november now, part of that is going to be a lot of messaging on the economy. we just received some of donald trump's prepared remarks. he's gonna be focusing a ton on inflation as well as crime and immigration, all issues they thank are very core to joe biden's vulnerability. and so that's what we'll be talking a lot about here. and in michigan, the same idea i'm told hilberg up some more discussion about the auto industry, but i just can't emphasize enough how important his team believes that these two states are to his pathway. and really he was here just a month ago as well. so again, the fact that he he's coming
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here just two weeks later shows how much he needs to win these states when they look ahead to the 2024 general election, yes, certainly does. >> elena. thank you for that? the port violence erupting between protesters and law enforcement at colleges across the country. we have cnn correspondence live on the scene, stay with cnn for the latest on this they're repeats evidence tells a story how we really happy. jesse? oh, margaret, sunday's at nine on cnn allergies with allegro. they won't stop me. nothing beats allegro. it's the fastest non drowsy 24 hour allergy relief live. >> your greatness, you, let me just say, i love planet fitness. dried-up when it doesn't then they got lots of
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