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Transcripts For CNNW CNN Newsroom With Ana Cabrera 20170806 21:00:00

he has done the 2 to 1 regulatory removal for every regulation put in. which couples with the house of representatives vote to appeal. $3.7 billion of cost removed from the backs of business across the country. people can now spend those man-hours, doing something productive for america. >> americans, however, are unhappy 37 they're unhappy with the job the president is doing they're unhappy with the job congress is doing. congress has a 10% approval rating this week. it's not going the right direction. do you feel many americans feel this way because of what? >> coming from the outside, i don't understand why everything's so difficult. the politicians spent eight years saying we're going to repeal and replace obama care. they get up there and say, wow! what are we going to do now. >> you're part of that, that's what americans are thinking, you are on the inside, you are working with members in congress. >> yes, ana, and that's why -- when i reached the conclusion that the aaca, which was made much better by the freedom caucus, got to the point where it was the most conservative, most state centered -- most patient centric proposal that could ever be gotten in this day and time, i went all out. >> republicans have an overwhelming majority, do you think it's possible americans are fed up with partisan politics? >> i think we're all fed up with partisan politics. everything is so one sided, i wish some democrats would come over and realize that obama care has failed and we ought to try a free market approach. i don't believe in single pair, and i think a lot of moderate democrats don't either. >> you're talking about doubling down on the freedom caucus. that's further away from democrats. >> what the freedom caucus accomplished was to get a state block grant, and the ability to put a work requirement for able bodied persons if they're going to get medicaid, i think work requirements are critical. we could have a separate discussion about what's happening to our workforce in america, if we want to fix our workforce, one thing we have to do is go back to having requirements for benefits. >> that bill didn't go anywhere. with all due respect that's not getting the job done. >> we got it done in the house, we're only one half of one third -- >> that's my point. it doesn't matter if he gets done in one half of congress, it doesn't matter if republicans all agree, and they can't pass it with just republicans. do you see where i'm going with that? you talk about asking democrats to come over, it seems like you're expecting them to completely adopt your ideas as opposed to finding room for negotiation, would you support the plan that's been put out there by some of your colleagues, a bipartisan plan by the problem solvers caucus 43 members of the house have signed on to a bill that does not totally repeal obama care, but -- >> i don't think it's repairable. i think the whole concept needs to be overhauled. that's why i want to repeal it. it has nothing to do with obama, it could have been truman care for all i care. >> i appreciate your time in offering your opinion and what you think would be solutions. we appreciate it. coming up. china's top diplomat calls on north korea to stop missile tests after tough new sanctions by the u.n. are they enough to change the regime's behavior? >> vice president pence is 3r50e7ing to run for his boss's job in 2020. how he and the white house are responding next. laquinta presents how to win at business. step one. point decisively with your glasses. abracadabra! the stage is yours. step two. choose laquinta. where you'll feel like the king of the road. check out our summer rates now at lq.com. fixodent plus adhesives. there's a denture adhesive that holds strong until evening. just one application gives you superior hold even at the end of the day fixodent. strong more like natural teeth. no splashing! wait so you got rid of verizon, just like that? uh-huh. i switched to t-mobile, kept my phone-everything on it- -oh, they even paid it off! wow! yeah. it's nice that every bad decision doesn't have to be permenant! ditch verizon. keep your phone. we'll even pay it off when you switch to america's best unlimited network. what are all these different topped & loaded meals? it's an american favorite on top of an american favorite, alice. it's like rodeos on top of rollercoasters. get your favorites on top of your favorites. only at applebee's. >> translator: i think the korean peninsula situation has reached a critical point of crisis, at the same time, it's a turning point for decision making and negotiations. >> let's talk it over with aleve labott. i'm curious how this u.n. vote is playing at today's summit? >> well, i mean, certainly, it's hanging over the summit, and you heard the chinese foreign minister saying sanctions were necessary. and in fact he made those comments after meeting with the north korean foreign minister -- north korea is not a member of asean but they're attending meeting surrounding that. there's an effort to isolate north koreans there, this is a region where everybody is concerned about destabilizing the korean peninsula. everyone who is talking to the north koreans is giving a unified message that this destabilization needs to stop. >> i spoke with nikki haley after yesterday's vote, let's listen to a part of our conversation. >> what we've seen as a reckless dictator who has been paranoid, irresponsible and who has continued to make his own interests over the interests of his people, and i think this is now going to see what they're going to do in response. but to have china stand with us along with japan and north korea and the rest of the international community telling north korea to do this, it's pretty impactful. >> china says it will go along with these sanctions, we have heard that before, time and again. china vows to punish north korea economically. do we have any significant assurances that beijing will actually follow through this time? >> well, i think it is really significant that china signed on to these resolutions. it was intense negotiations between ambassador nikki haley and the chinese, and i think you have to give credit to ambassador haley for getting it through. north korea may be able to implement some of these -- skmin in a has been cutting down on north korean coal. the real thing is, ana, these other countries may follow through on these sanctions, in addition to these sectors that we're talking about, it's about a billion dollars of north korean export income. china has 90% of north korean trade. so china needs to do even more than this, it remains to be seen this is what the pressure on china has been about. we have to see how much more they're ready to do, it's unclear whether this will be enough as you say. >> before you go, rex tillerson met with his russian counterpart for the first time since president trump signed off on those russia sanctions. what do we know about that meeting? >> it was a really -- it seemed to be a tough meeting, of course, they have things to talk about. they have this north korea issue. they have to talk about syria, they have to talk about ukraine, this is the first time the leaders have met since those sanctions were passed on russia. that's really clouding over the relationship and these talks. before prime minister lavrov came out, he said these sanctions are dangerous, and destabilizing to world security. i think they want to talk about these national security issues, this issue about sanctions and russian meddling in the u.s. election is kind of hanging over all that like an elephant in the room elise labott we'll see you next hour. why a recent plot to bring down an airliner reflects the ikea model of terrorism, we'll explain. whoooo. you're searching for something. like the perfect deal... ...on the perfect hotel. so wouldn't it be perfect if... ....there was a single site... ...where you could find the... ...right hotel for you at the best price? 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[ laughing ] so all you pay for is data. see how much you can save. choose by the gig or unlimited. call or go to xfinitymobile.com introducing xfinity mobile. a new kind of network designed to save you money. new developments in what police in australia are calling the most sophisticated terror plots ever attempted on australian soil. a man was released from custody, two brothers are now facing terror related charges. brian todd has more on this investigation and the foiled plot. brian? >> we've got new information on these two terror plots in australia which were connected. isis is getting more sophisticated with its external terror operations and could use some of these techniques on american targets. two terror plots in australia connected to one another, show isis' growing ambition to strike western targets. two men living in sydney have been arrested for trying to bring down a passenger plane with an eid. >> this is one of the most sophisticated plots that's ever been attempted on australian soil. >> the plotters after getting to the airport aborted the plan. authorities aren't sure why. police only got word of the planning 11 days later. according to australian officials, this was a do it yourself bomb. a senior isis commander sent part of the bomb assembled along with other loose parts, along with weapons grade explosives to turkey, via air cargo. >> this is an ikea model of terrorism. the fact that they were in touch directly to provide guidance with these blotters in australia. the supply of explosives, the imagination and ingenuity that went into it, take isis into a whole new ball game. >> one of the suspects was going to plant the ied on his own brother who was supposed to be an unsuspecting mule in the plan. >> his plan for was for his own brother to bring this device on board, not knowing what it was. his brother would have been killed in this attack, sacrificed. >> when the bomb plot didn't work, the alleged terrorists tried to make a device that would release a dangerous chemical in closed spaces. possibly public transportation facilities. a toxic industrial substance that smells like rotten eggs, hard to make and difficult to deploy as a weapon, but potentially deadly. >> what does it do to the body when you breathe it in? >> a very small amount would kill you in a few minutes. >> there's no evidence the device was completed. but a u.s. homeland security official tells cnn, the australia plots highlight the need to ramp up aviation security in america, and not play whack-a-mole with each new threat. >> look for isis to continue these types of plots, as the group loses territory on the battlefield. isis will continue to use ied's ah, laptop bombs and chemicals on western targets isis will likely get a lot better at evading security. >> a little alarming. the vice president and the white house condemning a report suggesting mike pence is proposing a white house run in 2020. what's fueling the speculation? number one rated marquee interior. behr's most advanced one-coat hide paint. only at the home depot. but with odor free blue-emu continuous pain relief spray, pain used to shut me down during pick-up games. i can box out any muscle or joint pain immediately. blue-emu continuous pain relief spray. it works fast and you won't stink. just to say a quick hello. the push back is following him all the way to new jersey. trump's approval rating is at just 33%. trump's own vice president may be thinking of a bid for the white house himself should trump not seek a second term. >> it is absolutely true that the vice president is getting ready for 2020, for re-election as vice president. >> no concern he's setting up a shadow campaign? >> and also 2018 -- zero concern, that is complete fiction, that is complete fabrication, and i know that his advisers who had comments attributed to them, have pushed back very strongly, and as am i right now, unequivocally, vice president pence is a very loyal, very dutiful and also incredibly effective vice president, active vice president with this president. >> i want to bring in our panel now, eugene scott is here with me in new york. the deputy editor for the weekly standard also with us, the vice president himself in fact came out with an official statement on official white house letterhead today saying, this is garbage. he called this report offensive and disgraceful. what are the chances the president has some republican competition in 2020. >> i think the chances are very real. it's not a surprise he would push back against his boss that he's not considering a run. given donald trump's record low approval ratings. it's believable he would look to see if he would be more popular in 2020 than the current president. >> pence's full political calendar, he has his own independent fund-raising group, a super pac, that necessarily unusual behavior? >> a little bit. not entirely, everybody in an administration at that top level is going to have their own super pac, they're going to be speaking to a lot of events, and as eugene noted, a lot of people like mike pence that do not like donald trump, mike pence has been doing a good job of keeping establishment republicans and republican donors on board. you may be able to look at that and say, he's doing this in the service of the president, but let's face it, i don't think anybody should count anything out. if you recall, during the election, and even after he was pdonald trump hinted he might nt do the job? i mean, he actually said something at one point, maybe i won't -- maybe i'll just get elected and then i'll quit. it was sort of a throwaway comment. but that led people to think how serious is this guy taking the job, and is he determined to see it through not just one term, but possibly two. because of this uncertainty that trump himself has indicated in the past, i think it only makes sense for people to be thinking about 2020 and have a plan ready in case he does decide he doesn't want to do it again. >> of course, it's only 2017. i'm sure we'll be talking about this as we get closer to 2020. i want to talk about a new message this white house and administration is trying. we know they've had a hard time harnessing their message in the past. let's watch. >> the unemployment rate is at a 16 year low, and consumer confidence is at a 16 year high, all while the dow jones continues to break records. president trump has clearly steered the economy back in the right direction. >> so that was the president's facebook page. this highlights the jobs reports, the wall street and stock market surge, is this an effective way for the president to go around mainstream media and traditional sources to get the message and the message out here that he wants? >> cnn has reported on every single thing you can find on this trump themed news station network, website they have. >> i think what's more important, you want to be honest with the voters and you want to tell them everything that's happening. the reality is, there are some challenges the administration is having, and that message isn't getting to those people that only watch that network, i think what's also very important, is the fact that there are more people who watch mainstream media outlets than the very specific trump specific option. you want people on the trump train that aren't already on the trump train. >> when it comes to the president's favorite method of communication, twitter. let me read you a quote from the article. kelly isn't vetting every presidential tweet. trump has shown a willingness to consult with his chief of staff before hitting send. they go on to say, sometimes kelly offers an alternative way to phrase something. he's not trying to limit or stop trump from tweeting all together. do you see this as the beginning of a new era? >> there's no way anyone could stop trump from tweeting. he loves to do it, and he sees it as his way of reaching people directly. he's not going to stop. i took a look at trump's tweets since general kelly took over. i did notice quite a change in tone, a lot of the tweets that i saw since general kelly took over are a lot more professional in tone. there was one big exception the u.s. relationship with russia is at a dangerous low. and he went on to say, you can thank congress for that, which didn't even -- which couldn't even pass health care. i mean, there's i tweet where he's criticizing congress, both houses of which have majorities of his own party, and so that was a -- maybe general kelly, that was one of the ones he didn't get a chance to vet beforehand. but i do get the impression looking at the president's twitter feed that his tone has changed he's been a little less combative, and said things in more positive ways. i have a feeling that has to be general kelly, that's certainly not the trump tweeting we've been seeing over the last couple years. >> great to have your takes. thanks for joining us. tense moments between a police officer and the passenger of a car captured on cell phone video, let's watch. >> we're looking for [ bleep ]. >> i understand that, do not move. >> why are you still pointing the gun at me. >> do not move right now. >> why are you still pointing the gun at me. my hands are here. >> the california officer held his gun on that passenger for nearly nine minutes after pulling over the driver for speeding. the officer says he drew his sidearm until backup could arrive, because he saw the passenger reach under his seat after asking the driver for her license and registration. this video has gone viral now, it's been viewed more than a million times on facebook. the passengers unexpected movement toward the bottom of the seat caused the officer to perceive a threat and draw his handgun. in the end the officer had a conversation with the passenger. and why the gun was pointed at him. the passenger understood why it happened. and apologized to the officer. he drafted a what to do guide if you're pulled over with a gun in your car, the guideline has been published. kaley has more. >> oh, my god. >> when ka steel was pulled over for a broken taillight, he had a gun in the car, and a permit nor it. >> african-american shot by police officers. >> his traffic stop in minnesota turned deadly after telling police he was armed. and sparked nationwide outrage. >> no one should ever leave a traffic stop in a body bag, whether it's a law enforcement officer or a citizen. >> in arizona, where you don't need a permit to carry a firearm, this state lawmaker wants to help prevent another death like castille's. >> it was very important that we definitely made sure that law enforcement officers recognize that individuals may not be resisting or they may not be following protocol, because they just don't know what it is. >> the arizona driver's manual now includes guidelines on what to do if you're pulled over with a gun in the car. keep your hands on the wheel, when the officer approaches, tell them where the gun is. >> you're minimizing fear for the officer and the person. >> if we both do what we're supposed to do, it takes that interns moment and begins to settle it. no law needed to be passed, bipartisan support made it happen. >> he got the republican governor's support behind his idea, and then worked with multiple state agencies to agree upon language. >> i did not want to put in place more laws that would potentially encarcerate more individuals. i wanted to set recommendations and really urge members of the public to gain this education so they can advocate and be proactive for themselves and also so law enforcement officers have an understanding. >> we feel uncomfortable whenever we see lights behind us, it's automatically a worry for us. but now i've heard about these new guidelines, hopefully there will be a new procedure. >> people who own guns need to be responsible and respect police who are always on edge when they have to stop someone. >> arizona appears to be the first state to put in writing, recommendations to avoid another deadly traffic stop. >> it would be naive to not believe there is conflict in some of these traffic stops. and if we can do something to try to keep everybody safe in those traffic stops, then we should do that. >> phoenix arizona, kayley hartung, cnn. coming up, recordings of the late princess diana, on her relationship with the prince. yeah. it's nice that every bad decision doesn't have to be permenant! ditch verizon. keep your phone. we'll even pay it off when you switch to america's best unlimited network. nit's softer than ever. new charmin ultra soft is softer than ever so it's harder to resist. okay, this is getting a little weird enjoy the go with charmin yes, 9 o'clock works for me. bye. another referral. our customers love us. (nail gun firing) (glass egg shattering) when the unexpected strikes... don't worry we've got you covered. the hartford strikes back. fixodent plus adhesives. there's a denture adhesive that holds strong until evening. just one application gives you superior hold even at the end of the day fixodent. strong more like natural teeth. what are all these different topped & loaded meals? it's an american favorite on top of an american favorite, alice. it's like abe lincoln on top of george washington. yonder. get your favorites on top of your favorites. only at applebee's. private moments, diana, princess of wales, rehearsing with her voice coach, relaxed, her guard down. sharing some of her most intimate thoughts. the tapes recorded by her voice coach at kensington palace and never before seen in the u.k. diana in her own words. they're also a source of great controversy, with family and friends saying the areaing of these moments amounts to a betraybe betray betrayal. the tapes were first discovered in 2001 at the home of a former butler, paul barrel. >> it's almost like reading her diary, that's wrong, it shouldn't be it can only upset prince william and prince harry, i understand there's a thirst for new information. i think it's a step too far. >> marcus rutherford defended the release of the recordings, saying, he was not her priest, doctor, therapist or lawyer. channel 4 says it made the decision to broadcast them, as they're important to the historical record saying, we carefully considered all the material used in the documentary, and though the recordings were made in private, the subjects covered you are a matter of public record and provide a unique insight into the preparations diana took to tell her own personal story. the tapes, part of which already aired in the u.s. diana talks openly about her marriage to prince charles. >> i was brought up and said -- >> diana speaks freely on the recordings about their dull sex life and hunts about the prince having an affairs with camilla parker bowls. she reveals her attempts do get the queen's help. the royal family has declined to comment on the recordings, almost 20 years has passed since her death on august 31st, diana in these videos are so vibrant, her essence so real, it's impossible not to be taken back to the time when her every move seemed to captivate the world. max foster, cnn, london. >> let's bring in kate williams joining us from london. so, this documentary ended, kate, about an hour ago. what's the reaction there? >> well, there's been a huge reaction to the documentary here in the united kingdom. it's trending on twitter all over central media. the reaction has been very, very similar across the board. i've been looking at it. and a lot of it is talking just as max is saying, about diana's charisma, her beauty, what a wonderful, emotional speaker she was. but above all it's talking about charles and it's not positive. a lot of critical tweets and texts and words about charles, about camilla, and particularly about charles' very cold treatment of diana. because diana made it clear in the documentary charles doesn't seem to love her from the beginning. he treats her in a cool manner, even when they're courting and makes it clear that camilla is the woman for him. he said diana at one point, i don't want to be the only prince of wales, he's expected to have a mistress. there's huge reaction. there's been a big reaction to the fact that diana went to the queen and asked for help. and the queen said, well, charles is hopeless. already one of the british newspapers has written a big editorial saying, well, charles is one who is hopeless to be our king. this documentary doesn't damage diana, it's very intimate, very exploratory, but in terms of the -- of charles, camilla and the royal family, a lot of criticism of charles and camilla. >> it will be interesting to see what the fallout is. very fascinating about princess diana 20 years after her death. we'll be right back. get your ancestrydna kit.here. spit. mail it in. learn about you and the people and places that led to you. go explore your roots. take a walk through the past. meet new relatives and see how a place and its people are all a part of you. ancestrydna. save 30% through august 15th at ancestrydna.com. when we see people, we see their hunger. their courage. we see their dreams. we see the things that built our nation. and we wonder, what would happen if everyone had equal access to education? what would they discover? what new worlds would they build? that's why we built a university for people. not for profit. and a new culture built around customer service. it all adds up to our most reliable network ever. one that keeps you connected to what matters most. parody and political satire, almost at the peak it seems right now in the age of president trump. alec baldwin and melissa mccarthy, have brought laughter what's all too often political discord. it's on cnn series. >> why are there newspapers all over the place. >> political satire. crazy characters. sketches. it was anything that was fun, that you wanted to try. that a network would never put on. >> i would like to welcome my first guest, jessica chastain. >> jessica chastain. >> you had a program that it's talk shows, satire of talk shows. >> real interested in the work you've been doing down in haiti. tell us a little bit about that. >> well -- >> do they have a six flags down there? >> there's not. >> the new media especially cites just for comedy. i think there are good things for the business. especially with the democratization there. >> the things that succeed on the internet happen organically. i'm seeing a hilarious video. it's largely because someone shared it. >> the executive producer brad jenkins is joining us now. brad, why do you think parody and politics go hand in hand? >> look, i think it has, as you'll see tonight, a very long history. this isn't new. ever since the days of shakespeare, comedy is a way to speak truth to power. so i think especially in this day and age where there's so much laser focus on the 24-hour news cycle, each misstep of this administration, or this public official is stepping into, comedians are there to point it out. comedians are there also to shine a spotlight on things that maybe people aren't paying attention to. you know, it's a long history. but in this day and age of social media, people are demanding it and sharing it at a rate that hasn't been seen before. >> the current administration has claimed that the parodies have crossed the line from merely funny to mean spirited. have you seen a change in tone? >> look, "snl" has been doing this equal opportunity, making fun of presidents since its inception. and our founders come from the "snl" spirit, will ferrell and adam mckay. it really is, you know, poking fun at things that everyone knows, right? everyone knows these public officials, everyone knows these scandals. and it's a way of shining a light on them. i don't think that it's ever really crossed the line. donald trump himself participated in "snl." he hosted a show. >> right. >> himself. so he understands the power of comedy. he participated in a self-aware enough to realize the power of comedy. it's just -- this is, again, a very long history. we're just living it today. >> well, brad jenkins, we look forward to tonight's episode which you participate in. thank you for joining us and offering your thoughts. >> thank you for having me. >> the history of comedy at 10:00 right after the 90s here 10:00 right after the 90s here on cnn. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com

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Transcripts For DW Close Up 20190409 12:30:00

both so they can plant crops and find food. floods and droughts will climate change become the main driver of mass migration you could not write any are going to use not if you want them probably more for them to come to. the conic exodus starts thirty s. on d. w. . the world seems a pretty topsy turvy place right now u.s. president donald trump has been doing what he can to turn the non-existing system of international trade on its head he is a keen advocate of trade wars and a slap to punitive tariffs on china and germany. says that german cars are exported unfairly to the u.s. and claims that they pose a threat to america's security. forces. there we will have the gas. there you'll be doing it. the way it works it doesn't. this is nonsense ling trend in global trade and it comes at a time when more and more people are worried about their jobs or feel completely marginalized so it's all rich man's game. they're destroying america that's what they're doing. just jobs around here now. everything is minimum wage or little. this is you get scared when you hear jobs are at risk somewhere. it's a vicious circle he just can't get away from globalization and for. simply wrong. for many people. how our president trumps aggressive high state policies impacting on international trade and our trade practices any better. it got it. all. soon given to hunger managing director of a german steel company says trump's america first trade policy doesn't make sense given toggles b.t.h. factories produce about two hundred thousand tonnes of stainless steel a year ten percent of that is exported to the u.s. . but in spring twenty eighteen those exports were hit with a twenty five percent import tariff that of course raises the price of german steel in the u.s. but a number of american manufacturing companies need that steel so they pay the extra tax. is also the. most of those companies have to import steel from other countries. and. it's the only way they can get it because the u.s. just doesn't produce enough high quality steel i mean. that's why steel imports are so high that dick loans it doesn't for the so the americans are paying more to cover the cost of those terrorists themselves so it is on them which. is going over to father wrecked and the steel processing industry in the u.s. is extremely worried about those higher prices because it in turn makes their products more expensive. isn't kevin dogger predicts that trumps terror of policy will backfire because the u.s. products that are made with german steel including cars machines and industrial pipes now cost more turnover remain stable for now because the companies can supply the high quality product needed but the tariffs are also making german still manufacturers very nervous. i'm just saying it will say that we're stuck in a trade war that slowly escalating and we can't get out of it how do you see it. defies that the danger is that things will eventually spin out of control and at some point trade will just collapse. i definitely describe this as a war not least because of the huge scale of it. i think you can if tariffs are imposed on the automobile industry we're talking about a situation that could affect many jobs or is not the all life that you're so we're really concerned about it is not all shaun's either thought. for years economists and politicians have been telling us global free trade is good for everyone president trump apparently disagrees now we've got a trade war on our hands. what's up in the u.s. . we've come to the rust belt a part of the u.s. which has been in industrial decline for decades new terrorists were supposed to help the steel industry there but that hasn't happened on business after another has gone bankrupt the downturn in the steel industry in this part of the country began in the one nine hundred seventy s. and it has had a massive impact on local communities. president trump tweeted about this decline repeatedly during the election campaign as he tried to win over blue collar workers. general motors was once the well it's not just manufacture of i want to my feet but now three of its factories are on the verge of collapse like this one in town ohio where the chevrolet cruze his belt. she took used to welcome the concert assembly line he drives a chevrolet but not a cruise he prefers a power phone gas guzzling tomorrow. this is a twenty seventeen fiftieth anniversary camaro s.s. to assess convertible quad black edition so it's black black roof black interior and black wheels these cars don't exist you will find for twenty seven seasons for sale on the internet. but if they see a president from visited have high and demanded the general motors keep them open g.m. plans to close the plant anyway. the whole place is going to close and it's the skin to break everyone's heart because all these people like to do truthfully is to make decent money and work hard and then go out and spend their money in the community and thrive in the community and general motors is the largest thing we have employer wise trumbull county ohio. was living the american dream and he believed that donald trump could do something to change the norms of free trade that so often destroy jobs. they did that we call in at the drive in restaurant when scott c. still lacks. the c.c. doesn't much money hand that's typical for many people in this part of the hire a lot of the jobs that pay well have disappeared. still she makes great food. all about but more on her and although. now the g.m. plant is closing what do you think what does it mean for your brother. or you wouldn't just not their jobs around here now. everything is minimum wage or a little bump. and there is still in their person just can't live on that it's. impossible thirty bucks the arts of. ever work very well using arts that i've been doing all day already read. the eversley the narrative make my save money. scott sister is thinking about buying a new car a german car for the first time in my life to ever thought to buy another product besides general motors and she likes what i'm what is going on all the way going to outlets and they make us any more we are going to leave i have one around to heart and i say it's time i don't know all the smaller doesn't appear in germany it's a big issue. so here's a rust belt resident who wants to buy a german s.u.v. that's built in tennessee for the u.s. market only well trained in the age of globalization pays no attention to international borders but that's not what president trump simplistic catch phrases and punitive tyrants would have you believe. that. many ohio residents like scott a new system bought into trump's promises but a local official of the auto workers union says that tariffs don't protect jobs quite the opposite in tax. tariffs and they want to impose these tariffs it actually kind of hurt the auto industry because still the price of still what so it cost g.m. to build it cost them more money to build the cars here now if the prices still is higher so they're continuing to move. this work to mexico bailey david greene points out that the president has rewarded big corporations that transferred jobs to mexico to comp labor costs. president trump gave them huge tax breaks in this g.o.p. tax plan and in that tax plan it's actually cheaper for companies like general motors to import cars instead of paying twenty one percent tax now they only pay ten and a half percent tax right on their profits so it's cheaper for them to actually bring these cars in from outside the country and we think that that's wrong and we think that that's not helping our cause here at all. so instead of america first it's jobs lost still trumps tyrus and trade wars remain popular with many voters the president recently claimed that imported german cars represent a threat to america's national security and he threatened to stop a tariff of up to twenty five percent on them. i've come to the city of youngstown to meet the associate editor of the business journal brian he's the newspaper's expert on the decline of the automobile industry . a number of u.s. presidents are trying to change american trade policies brian is particularly skeptical of donald trump's approach. the trade deficit hasn't changed people are still buying imports despite higher prices in and whether or not those prices will really be that that that detrimental to the consumer is yet to be seen. in the answer isn't as you said tariffs per se. the answer is in the trade war the answer is actually finding different ways more innovative ways to manufacture products in this country. trade wars no one ever wins. trade or we have to remember that. the chances yes. differ with the president on that killer issue because no one really wins a trade war it's who loses the least i think when it comes down to it. and studies indicate that while global free trade has helped the rich to increase their wealth it is also destroyed the jobs of many blue collar workers a trade war would likely make this situation worse. than o'brien talked about innovative jobs but what happens when new technologies end up competing with each other. we've seen that in germany in the effort to rebuild the economy and infrastructure in the former communist east the chemical production sector in the beautiful boy from region was wiped out by government subsidies helped to create a new solar technology industry there andrea's konetzni worked as a supervisor at a company that made solar cells. what was the mood like back then cell of valley sounds like silicon valley exciting or small for. there was a new sense of optimism people were saying that the technology sector was growing and creating more jobs in the region unemployment started falling. more than you know. government subsidies help the new solar cell sancta to get started and compete effectively in world markets but at about the same time china massively increased subsidies in its solar cell industries and the german sector crashed once again and drabs come yet sneak found himself facing an uncertain future. this is what you get scared when you hear jobs are at risk somewhere. and it's even worse for older workers. who are afraid that you won't be able to find a new job in the same region. like you and german minister of economics and technology at the time. was opposed to mall subsidies he preferred a free market approach yes it is. because his video here of a translator speaking in the bundestag and he's talking about whether the subsidies for the solar energy center should continue. so much or not. i don't think there's been a record increase in the solar cell sector and eighty million customers and four million small to medium sized businesses are paying the price this sort of command economy policy is unacceptable here in europe and i'm sure that if you've been through this is it what do you think you meant by that. but it is well that's politics for you it hasn't changed. it's a complicated situation. and it is pretty hard to make any sense of it first the german government provided subsidies and then cut them then the e.u. stepped in with protective tariffs but china with its command economy became the world leader in the production of solar cells has come yet snit was demoted to a janitor's job at the factory. tariffs and subsidies seem to be part of the cultural world of international trade and brass konetzni and probably feel like pieces on the chessboard of globalization. economist yes the populist donald trump is playing to the existential fears of these workers. there's one reason why donald trump became president. he won states that have been hit hard by globalization in the midwest plus pennsylvania and ohio. these states traditionally vote democrat but he managed to carry them by attacking globalization and china and his campaign speeches without the states that have lost out because of globalization it's impossible to understand donald trump success. for. president trump is clearly abandon the principles of free trade in favor of tariffs and trade walls but free trade has never really been free. for. everyone's talking about free trade right now but free trade does not exist it never has existed. there's always an element of protectionism in trade policy. this is just sometimes more concealed in some cases than others. i don't think it would be a good idea in the long term for world trade to develop into a sort of jungle where the u.s. china and the e.u. subsidies and protectionism to compete with each other. well trade may not be fair but now more than ever one rule seems to govern survival of the fittest for example in africa where the u.s. and china are expanding their trade presence. both countries see excellent opportunities in the west african country of ghana or the gold coast as it was once known. this part of the continent is rich in natural resources. the european union is also involved in trade here and is acting in its own interests by demanding duty free market access for subsidized european agricultural products garment of course would prefer to continue to produce its own farm products to keep young people in rural areas gainfully employed. but the e.u. is having none of that. i've come to ghana's capital our crowd to meet economist and labor expert. we stopped by tomato market otu says the prices are set here on a daily basis. that someone is someone in the market who is fixing the price in the morning. was. the sellers tell me that they need a fair price it's the dry season now so tomatoes are brought down from ghana's far north east they can't compete with inexpensive tomato paste that's important from europe and china. you can find it on sale just about everywhere. fresh local tomatoes are left to rot. it's hot and humid right now so those tomato should be processed quickly but that's not an option. to subtly here john. how about the workers. well that. was definitely in part the competition was high but there's no message could be said his. choice must apply to bring your from your old life there to a metro from italy is have yourself advised by do it down commission of health laws that's it to live manufacturing in china i've little better. business model they're going to sell his arsenal everything that has. gone his main agricultural exports his cocoa and is the world's second largest producer and exporter of oil. but almost none of it is processed into chocolate here that's down in other countries. germany for example is europe's leading producer of chocolate has. to nine search the local markets for chocolate passing but couldn't find any we finally managed to track some down at this carriage the shortage of processed chocolate here comes as no surprise to a whose father was a coke i found. about produce clothes. which of course buy you have to make a special effort they're not that lucky chocolate ha liking gemini the way you produce zero amount of coke. is everywhere so how many. problem in the hop is that chocolate before and i'm not to throw it out my fat i did before you died even though you produced a large amount of column letters in a possible to produce unexplored destructors. to say germany or you are. closer reason of all that it's probably because of the trip policies you've mentioned so it doesn't force us to. ignore long as zero tolerance. and bad not survive it. that. tariff escalation is a new concept for. for years the country was allowed to protect itself against cheap agricultural imports and exports its own farm products duty frame. but in recent free trade agreements the e.u. ordered ghana to drop its tyrants if it wanted to continue exports. some pressure from the. significant amount of pressure. that if you don't. remember. poor countries are going to lose the. this is a. policy work. in the past. like mr wood i see what mr trump says. so when it comes to international trade it's europe first and germany first although we don't shout about it back to your ass stance we just poke pressure on our less powerful trading partners. i head back to europe via italy. but i've come to the southern province of where tomatoes are grown during the summer for export. i'm on my way to visit one of the farms. the crop is being harvested mostly by african immigrants. one of them is in three c. in new south from ghana he wanted a better life so he made his way to north africa and then to italy and now he's stuck here. i ask him what he earns picking tomatoes from the mobs are still going to do so much goes just do your all fifty cent per hour and not pay i want a son i say how much. how much do you hear oh i almost gave in you take one hour one hour to miss one hour you make one. you know so you you get three your three year fifty. they are your family are you on the top. i said they wanted to work their problem they just you tell it it's almost like it's living i guess in store to see. you three see is earning next to nothing harvesting the e.u. subsidized tomatoes and in the process he is indirectly hurting the tomato industry in his home country. like scott j. took in the u.s. some time trask on its knee in bitter val's it three c. in new south is subject to the forces of international trade the local farm workers union is demanding higher wages for these people union official daniel agger cornélie is looking into a three c's case. for it yeah ok notes that edriss last employer paid him less than half the national minimum wage. and there was fear. was for some other bus. with such low wages they can't afford to pay rent and it's impossible for them to become integrated into italian society. because it is going to be a bit in. many of them live illegally in abandoned houses in the countryside that. they live in ghettos near towns. they go into. i want to see where a tree see lives so i drive him home to an abandoned military airfield. migrant workers leave in barracks and containers set up on what used to be the runway. and you saw all the houses for people there from anywhere from. twenty or trying to drag the people. it's a ghetto for migrant workers right in the middle of. the european union. to simply accept. it as a new. eatery see in noosa is caught between a rock and a hard place he can't become part of european society and he can't go back to ghana where he would be shunned as a loser he's one of the victims of globalization. i'd like to talk to the e.u. trade commissioner about subsidies tariffs and worker exploitation but she has no time for an interview so instead of visit continue chancellor merkel's personal representative for africa policy and ask him the same questions. do germany and the e.u. treat the victims of globalization any different than the us starts right now. we're gonna try and i was. in italy we saw african farmers being treated essentially like slaves and a lot less than italy's minimum wage harvesting tomatoes that are then exported to ghana has ruined the domestic tomato market and so that makes sense as you know was not this was in. and. unfortunately i think maybe ghana overestimated its own ability. it improved an interim trade agreement that was in its own favor. those. trade. they took those clubs as we did not seek a serious discussion on trade issues. we had decided that free trade is good. and we wanted to get our products into that market and so we try to persuade the africans to agree to our proposals and so. we didn't even think about the fact that it's ridiculous to bring people from ghana to italy to harvest tomatoes and then send those tomatoes back it will make a lot more sense to produce tomatoes in africa it has the right weather for it we can support really just chance or agrees to the chancellor sees it like i do. noko says those policies have to be reconsidered to improve trade relations and end the migration of refugees from africa to europe. was full of egos a prosperous africa is in the best interests of germany and europe you've got not only incision in the us do we simply cannot try to integrate hundreds of millions of people into europe. those who move to me to put it simply for every job that exists in africa means one family less that wants to come to europe as a woman you always gets in africa. europe first china first america fast you can receive. and in the us sculpture took all wanted a better life they didn't get it major donald trump international trade has become a game that only powerful states can where it's now the survival of the fittest but what happened to the promise of prosperity for everyone. an idea that was coined in germany. and the brits seem a sex phone operator who worked her masters thesis on the potato. to really. not turn on well it gets more ridiculous from their. literature list traditionally st. what secrets lie behind the small. finder. most of experience and explore a fascinating and cultural heritage sites. d.w. world heritage for sixty get.

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Transcripts For DW Close Up 20190408 22:30:00

so long even by us i was it would have made more. my choice to discard if i was given their way to transmit the straw. men in the cash mom match and i will. tell you. the world seems a pretty topsy turvy place right now u.s. president donald trump has been doing what he can to turn the long existing system of international trade on its head he is a keen africa to trade wars and a slap to punitive tyrants from china and germany. says that german cars are exported unfairly to the u.s. and claims that they pose a threat to america's security. because they do their. best twenty first the first. the day where it's just. this is nonsense ling trending global trade and it comes at a time when more and more people are worried about their jobs or feel completely marginalized so it's all rich man's game. they're destroying america that's what they're going. to jog around here and. everything is minimum wage or little. system of then you get scared when you hear jobs are at risk somewhere. it's a vicious circle you just can't get away from globalization for a. group as asian simply. for many people. how our president trumps aggressive high state policies impacting on international trade and our trade practices any better. all. of. this intervene to hunger managing director of a german steel company says trump's america france trade policy doesn't make sense when targets b.t.h. factories produce about two hundred thousand tonnes of stainless steel a year ten percent of that is exported to the yo ass. but in spring twenty eighteen those exports were hit with a twenty five percent importer of that of course raises the price of german steel in the u.s. but a number of american manufacturing companies need that steel so they pay the extra tax. is also their demise. most of those companies have to import steel from other countries. it's the only way they can get it because the u.s. just doesn't produce enough high quality steel i mean. that's why steel imports are so high it. looms with a symphony of paying more to cover the cost of those terrorists themselves so it is on with. the father and the steel processing industry in the us is extremely worried about those higher prices because it in turn makes their products more expensive. so in kevin dougherty predicts that trumps terror of policy will backfire because the u.s. products that are made with german steel including cars machines and industrial pipes now cost more turnover remain stable for now because the companies can supply the high quality product needed but the tariffs are also making german still manufacturers very nervous. i just say you know to say that we're stuck in a trade war that slowly escalating and we can't get out of it how do you see it. if i said to the danger is that things will eventually spin out of control and at some point trade will just collapse. i definitely describe this as a war not least because of the huge scale of it. i think that i doubt if any of tariffs are imposed on the automobile industry we're talking about a situation that could affect many jobs was not the all right that your fear so we're really concerned about it. but also these ideas all. the years economists and politicians have been telling us global free trade is good for everyone president trump apparently disagrees now we've got a trade war on our hands. what's up in the u.s. . we've come to the rust belt a part of the u.s. which has been an industrial decline for decades new terrorists were supposed to help the steel industry there but that hasn't happened on business after another has gone bankrupt the downturn in the steel industry in this part of the country began in the nine hundred seventy s. and it has had a massive impact on local communities. president trump tweeted about this decline repeatedly during the election campaign as he tried to win over blue collar workers. general motors was once the well it's not just manufacture of a want to might be but now three of its factories are on the verge of collapse like this one in town ohio where the chevrolet cruze is spelt. scott she took used to welcome the concert sandy like he drives a chevrolet but not a cruise he prefers a powerful gas guzzling tamara. this is a twenty seventeen fiftieth anniversary camaro s.s. two s.s. convertible quad black edition so it's black black roof black interior and black wheels these cars don't exist you'll find for twenty seven seasons for sale on the internet. but only have a c.m. president trump visited out of high and demanded the general motors keep the hope and g.m. plans to close the plant anyway. of the whole plant is going to close and it's a this get a break everyone's heart because all these people like to do truthfully is to make decent money and work hard and then go out and spend their money in the community and thrive in the community and general motors is the largest thing we have employer wise and trouble. was living the american dream and he believed that donald trump could do something to change the laws of free trade that so often destroy jobs. maybe that we call in at the drive in restaurant wescott see still lacks. a c.c. doesn't much money hand that's typical to many people in this part of i hire a lot of the jobs that pay well have disappeared. still she makes great food. all about but long. now the g.m. plant is closing what do you think you know what does it mean for your brother. or you wouldn't just not their jobs around here now. everything is minimum wage or little bugs. and there is a standard person just can't live on that it's. impossible for thirty bucks so hour to ten bucks an hour warmer every work very well you see there are dogs that even do. the eversley they're very close a mother. sconce sister is thinking about buying a new car a german car for the first time in my life to ever thought to buy another product besides general motors and she likes what i'm lazy all of them i get out. and they make us any more we are going to leave i have money around car and i say last time i don't know of the smaller doesn't appear in germany it's a big issue. so here's a rust belt resident who wants to buy a german s.u.v. that's built in tennessee for the u.s. market only well trained in the age of globalization pays no attention to international borders but that's not what president trump simplistic catchphrases and punitive tyrants would have you believe. in. many of high residents like scott and he says to have bought into trump's promises but a local official of the auto workers union says that tariffs don't protect jobs quite the opposite in fact. that tariffs and they want to impose these tariffs it actually kind of hurt the auto industry because still the price of still what are so it cost g.m. to build it cost them more money to build the cars here now if the prices still is higher so they're continuing to move this work to mexico bailey david greene points out that the president has rewarded big corporations that transferred jobs to mexico to comp labor costs. president trump gave them huge tax breaks in this g.o.p. tax plan and in that tax plan it's actually cheaper for companies like general motors to import cars instead of paying twenty one percent tax now they only pay ten and a half percent tax right on their profits so it's cheaper for them to actually bring these cars in from outside the country now and we think that that's wrong and we think that that's not helping our cause here at all. so instead of america it's jobs lost still trumps tyrus and trade wars remain popular with many voters the president recently claimed that imported german concept resent a threat to america's national security and he threatened to stop a tariff of up to twenty five percent on them. i've come to the city of youngstown to meet the associate editor of the business journal brian he's the newspaper's expert on the decline of the automobile industry . a number of us presidents of trying to change american trade policies particularly skeptical of donald trump's approach. the trade deficit hasn't changed people are still buying imports despite higher prices in and whether or not those prices will really be that detrimental to the consumer is yet to be seen. in the answer isn't as you said tariffs per se. the answer is in the trade war the answer is actually finding different ways more innovative ways to manufacture products in this country. trade wars no one ever wins a trade war we have to remember that. the chances yes. i may if differ with the president on that issue because no one really wins a trade war. it's who loses the least i think when it comes down to it. and studies indicate that while global free trade has helped the rich to increase their wealth it has also destroyed the jobs of many blue collar workers a trade war would likely make this situation worse. dan o'brien talked about innovative jobs but what happens when new technologies end up competing with each other. we've seen that in germany in the effort to rebuild the economy and infrastructure in the former communist east the chemical production sector in the beautiful dolphin region was wiped out by government subsidies helped to create a new solar technology industry there and various konetzni worked as a supervisor at a company that made solar cells. what was the mood like back then sell a valley sounds like silicon valley exciting. there was a new sense of optimism people were saying that the technology sector was growing and creating more jobs in the region unemployment started falling. more than you know. government subsidies help the new solar cell sancta to get started and compete effectively in world markets but at about the same time china massively increased subsidies in its solar cell industries in the german sector crashed once again and drabs come yet sneek found it himself facing an uncertain future on. this if you get scared when you hear jobs are at risk somewhere. and it's even worse for older workers. who are afraid that you won't be able to find a new job in the same region. like you and german minister of economics and technology at the time. was opposed to more subsidies he preferred a free market approach. yes it is because who wants and i go see a video here of iceland speaking in the bundestag and he's talking about whether the subsidies for the solar energy center should continue. or not. i don't think there's been a record increase in the solar cell sector and eighty million customers and four million small to medium sized businesses are paying the price this sort of command economy policy is not acceptable here in europe i was in this case even though this is it what do you think he meant by that. but it is well that's politics for you it hasn't changed. it's a complicated situation. and it is pretty hard to make any sense of it first the german government provided subsidies and then cut them then the e.u. stepped in with protective tariffs but china with its command economy became the world leader in the production of solar cells as konetzni was demoted to a janitor's job at the factory. tariffs and subsidies seem to be part of the cutthroat world of international trade and prayers konetzni and probably feel like pieces on the chessboard of globalization. economist yes zicam says the populist donald trump is playing to the existential fears of these workers. there's one reason why donald trump became president. he won states that had been hit hard by globalization in the midwest plus pennsylvania and ohio. these states traditionally vote democrat but he managed to carry them by attacking globalization and china in his campaign speeches without these states that have lost out because of globalization it's impossible to understand donald trump success. for. president trump has clearly abandoned the principles of free trade in favor of tariffs and trade walls but free trade has never really been free. for. everyone's talking about free trade right now. but free trade does not exist it never has existed. there's always an element of protectionism in trade policy. this is just sometimes more concealed in some cases than others. i don't think it would be a good idea in the long term for world trade to develop into a sort of jungle where the u.s. china and the e.u. subsidies and protectionism to compete with each other. trade may not be fair but now more than ever one rule seems to govern survival of the fittest for example in africa where the u.s. and china are expanding their trade presence. both countries see excellent opportunities in the west african country of ghana or the gold coast as it was once known. this part of the continent is rich in natural resources. the european union is also involved in trade here and is acting in its own interests by demanding duty free market access for subsidized european agricultural products garner of course would prefer to continue to produce its own farm products to keep young people in rural areas gainfully employed. but the e.u. is having none of that. because i've come to ghana's capital our crowd to meet economist and labor expert. we stopped by tomato market oh to says the prices are set here on a daily basis. citizenship that someone is someone in the market who is fixing the prize in the morning or a lady who was worse than the sellers tell me that they need a fat price it's the dry season now so tomatoes have brought down from ghana's found north east they can't compete with inexpensive tomato paste that's imported from europe and china. you can find it on sound just about everywhere. fresh local tomatoes are left to rot. just it's hot and humid right now so those tomato should be processed quickly but that's not an option there's nothing disagree here john. locke our bodies are all work it. was important competition for you guys but there's a message to dismiss. this story as must apply to bring your four year old the lies that are metal from italy is focused on the guys commission of all for the jets to sell for too long a manufacturer an entire life little by. little more they're going for yourself as artillery shells are. goners man agricultural exports is cocoa it is the world's second largest producer and exporter of rollitt. but almost none of it is processed into chocolate here fats down in other countries. germany for example is europe's leading producer of chocolate has. such the local markets for chocolate basket but couldn't find any we finally managed to track some down at this carriage the shortage of processed chocolate here comes as no surprise to old to whose father was. produced close. by how to make a special effort to locate structures hot liking germany the way you produce zero amount of coke. is everywhere so many. problem is that truckload before and i'm not to throw it out my father had it before you buy it or you produced montauk out there is no possible the producer explored destructors. to say germany are your. clothes you're using the best it's probably because of the trip policies you've mentioned so it doesn't force us to. ignore long as. i'm. not surprised really what this one was you know says it would. have tired and that's why you tariff escalation. tariff escalation is a new concept for accounting for years the country was allowed to protect itself against cheap agricultural imports and exports its own farm products duty free. but in recent free trade agreements the e.u. ordered ghana to drop its tyrants if it wanted to continue export. some pressure from the you again you interrupt your tribe that i don't know how that to impose a. significant amount of pressure without warning that if you don't know push a terrorist and i remember this deadline. yeah poor countries are going to lose their market assets into a well if you have followed the way e.p.a. negotiations have gone. you clearly see that this is a. first policy would clear interests. everybody has acted in the past like mr wood i see important as our trances. so when it comes to international trade it's europe first and germany first although we don't shout about it back here and stance we just put pressure on our next powerful trading partners. i head back to europe via italy. i've come to the southern province of where tomatoes are grown german this summer for export. i'm on my way to visit one of the farms. the crop is being harvested mostly by african immigrants. one of them is e.t.c. in new south from ghana he wanted a better life so he made his way to north africa and then to italy now he's stuck here. i ask him what he earns picking tomatoes from the mobs are still going to do so much closer to three year old fifty cents per hour and not pay i want a son i say. how much do you hear oh i. mean you take one hour one hour to miss one hour you make one. you know so you you get three your three year fifty. your family or. the two or. you not ritual that's the problem they just you tell it it's almost black like it's libya. i guess it is hard to say. you three see is earning next to nothing for harvesting e.u. subsidized tomatoes and in the process he is indirectly hurting the tomato industry in his home country. like scott chittick in the u.s. some time trask on its knee in pitiful it three c. in new south is subject to the forces of international trade the local farm workers union is demanding higher wages for these people union official daniel like a valley is looking into it receives cakes. but it notes that edriss last employer paid him less than half the national minimum wage. the bill's fear. was to sell out a bus. with such low wages they can't afford to pay rent and it's impossible for them to become integrated into italian society. because it is going to leave it in a bundle and many of them live illegally in abandoned houses in the countryside yet there is a will or they live in ghettos near towns. they go into. i want to see where he treats he lives so i drive him home to an abandoned military airfield. migrant workers leave in barracks and containers set out on what used to be the runway. and these are all the houses for people of how many are. always trying to drive the people. it's a ghetto for migrant workers right in the middle of the european union. this replace. to me to do. it three see in news is caught between a rock and a hard place he can't become part of european society and he can't go back to ghana where he would be shunned as a loser he's one of the victims of globalization i'd like to talk to the e.u. trade commissioner about subsidies tariffs and worker exploitation but she has no time for an interview so instead visit to continue chancellor merkel's personal representative for africa policy and ask him the same questions. do germany and the e.u. treat the victims of globalization any different than the us stands right now. tired and almost as quick to respond. immediately we saw african farm workers being treated essentially like slaves on a lot less than italy's minimum wage harvesting tomatoes that are then exported to ghana it has ruined the domestic tomato market that is that makes sense as he was marcus was in kinds and you know unfortunately i think maybe ghana overestimated its own ability. it improved in the interim trade agreement that wasn't in its own favor. is that fair trade. they took those clubs as we did not seek a serious discussion on trade issues. we had decided that free trade is good. and we wanted to get our products into that market and so we try to persuade the africans to agree to our proposals and so. we didn't even think about the fact that it's ridiculous to bring people from ghana to italy to harvest tomatoes and then send those tomatoes back it will make a lot more sense to produce tomatoes in africa it has the right weather for it support and say i'm busy just chancer agrees to the chancellor sees it like i do. know who says those policies have to be reconsidered to improve trade relations and end the migration of refugees from africa to europe. a prosperous africa is in the best interests of germany and europe you've now and that means. you firstly we simply cannot try to integrate hundreds of millions of people into europe is. to put it simply for every job that exists in africa means one family less that wants to come to europe you've always got some africa is not for me having an open. europe fast china fast america fast. and in the us sculpture took all wanted a better life. they didn't get it major donald trump international trade has become a game that only powerful states can where it's now the survival of the fittest but what happened to the promise of prosperity for everyone. an idea that was coined in germany. cut. russian anniversary. by an destroys bookman might melt in the hundred days and classes. and lights this state the most beautiful goal of the day in a furious comeback against live. a. minute on. when the hour starts rising people fight for survival on a case on a budget limited budget when there's a flood water comes up to a waist by your clothes faster everyone me but. the lack of water is equally

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Transcripts for FOXNEWS One Nation With Brian Kilmeade 20240604 01:09:00

show do something important, we have to do a better job of communicating, limited government conservative free-market approach to our problems, works for country in the average people who are sing of the contract table that are saying but in god's green earth is happening to the we have work to do sue and with intelligence and congressional ground, and as a commentator, can you see yourself in the mix for 2024. mike: well we started brian, to start have change the narrative on how we talk about how we get america to believe in america again and have a get america to understand that we are bigger than our problems. but that will take work, that means that we have got to get her hands off of each other's throats us are coming real solutions and we have to be bold. but i to places like new hampshire and south carolina and in iowa and candidly there's

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Transcripts for FOXNEWS One Nation With Brian Kilmeade 20240604 07:09:00

public to this last election show do something important, we have to do a better job of communicating, limited government conservative free-market approach to our problems, works for country in the average people who are sing of the contract table that are saying but in god's green earth is happening to the we have work to do sue and with intelligence and congressional ground, and as a commentator, can you see yourself in the mix for 2024. mike: well we started brian, to start have change the narrative on how we talk about how we get america to believe in america again and have a get america to understand that we are bigger than our problems. but that will take work, that means that we have got to get her hands off of each other's throats us are coming real solutions and we have to be bold. but i to places like new hampshire and south carolina and in iowa and candidly there's

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Transcripts for FOXNEWS One Nation With Brian Kilmeade 20240604 10:09:00

show do something important, we have to do a better job of communicating, limited government conservative free-market approach to our problems, works for country in the average people who are sing of the contract table that are saying but in god's green earth is happening to the we have work to do sue and with intelligence and congressional ground, and as a commentator, can you see yourself in the mix for 2024. mike: well we started brian, to start have change the narrative on how we talk about how we get america to believe in america again and have a get america to understand that we are bigger than our problems. but that will take work, that means that we have got to get her hands off of each other's throats us are coming real solutions and we have to be bold. but i to places like new hampshire and south carolina and in iowa and candidly there's

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