direct redefining insurance inside politics sunday with manu raju next on cnn taking this stand, israel makes a move in gaza president biden tries to outshine donald trump overseas i think it as measured homework countries support for democratic values that they honor those who risk their life and lost her life. >> while at home, the vice president calls trump's conviction disqualify. >> cheaters don't like getting caught and exclusive details on a new plan to further overhaul immigration in well kresse's concerns, plus retribution. i would have every right to go after them. new reporting republicans promised payback. >> thanks, have consequences. they're going to have consequences as issue. >> and perseverance a rising democrats star confronts a debilitating terminal diagnosis when it comes to eunice progressive is not a good thing to be. >> our exclusive sit down ahead inside politics. that's reporting from inside the court's power starts now good morning. >> welcome to inside politics sunday manu raju, you're looking at live pictures. president biden is about to fly home from france. >> he just wrapped up at a visit to an american cemetery in normandy where you offered more warnings about the risks facing democracy yet as he tries to ensure american allies by the us commitment to the world order, biden has not mentioned donald trump much by name, actually now, once during his pair of major speeches, but the contrast he's trying to draw is clear as he seeks reframe the race and take on his major vulnerabilities now, new this morning on that front, cnn has breaking news and how the president is trying to address one big weakness with a major policy move were on that in just a moment. >> but first biden making another veiled jab at trump this morning with a visit to the end, martin cemetery in normandy cnn's senior white house correspondent, kayla tausche is live from paris for taylor, the president just took some questions. what did he say well, president biden was paying his respects at a cemetery just outside paris were thousands of fallen american soldiers who died during world war i are buried at the end of the visit, he walked over and he talked to reporters about how important alliances are and how it's unfathomable to think that the us would not come to europe's defenses in the past or in the future. >> and he also talked a little bit about his views on what is happening in europe right now. and he said that happen the battle, and there's no replacement for showing up. here's the president i think it as a measure public countries support for democratic values that are honor those risk their lives and lost their lives. >> the idea that i come to normal and not make the short trip here to pay tribute. and it's the same story. think about america showed up. america showed up this is a capstone to a trip that essentially in its whole was sought, was set to be a contrast between biden and trump. >> biden declined to reference trump by name in those comments. but while he was in normandy, his campaign put out two slamming trump on issues related to military and defense in 2018 when trump was in france, he declined to visit that very cemetery at the time deciding whether but later aides said that he called the soldiers buried their losers, which trump at the time denied. we reached out to the trump campaign for comment. they said the biden team is desperate and they said it's president biden who's been disrespectful to service members but clearly this is going to be a line of attack between the two candidates as this trip concludes, and we enter the homestretch of the election. mono hello tausche in paris. >> thank you and now there's a lot to unpack, so let's break this all down with our great panel this morning. seung min kim of the associated press said, harnden with the new york times, cnn's isaac dovere, and our allies. and with npr, good morning. >> all right. great. thank you, guys all for joining me today. lot to discuss. that was an interesting trip over the last several days. what's interesting, of course, as we all know that elections are typically decided by the economy, but this is an election, of course, it has two words that are raging overseas. they are the biden has been making the case about democracy that says major selling point. this is how voters view how the issues that are important to them economy number 130, 1% immigration number two, we'll talk about that in a second. preserving democracy is 16%, but still the issues about ukraine and the israel-hamas war ranking lower down sudden when you cover the white house for the associated press, how does the biden campaign believed that these issues, foreign policy issues, may have an impact or du the not think you'll have much of an impact come november? >> well, there's a lot contained within that foreign policy category. obviously, we know that one of their biggest weaknesses is the biden administration's handling of the war in gaza, which has really the saloon progressive disillusioned progressives and young voters when the, on the issue of democracy, which you can also kind of put into this foreign policy category, as we have seen over the last several days with president biden and france, they believe that is a really fundamental issue that unites not only their coalition, but gets those independent voters, those so-called nikki haley voters that we have seen in persistently turnout in these primaries. they believe that that is something that could attract them to there, sayyed, and that's why you saw that's one of the reasons why you saw biden speaks so forcefully in these issues over the last several days, he never really said the words donald trump, but you see the political subtexts. you can't help but see that contrast that president biden and his aides they're trying to implicitly make against someone like donald trump who disparages the nato alliance, who has said, who has given the green light to putin to do whatever he wants and biden says that is not the way and you really invokes the memory of d-day, invokes the the honor of these army rangers to say what would they ask us to do? we they would ask us to one quote was vanquish hateful ideologies and you can't help but think that president biden was thinking about donald trump at that moment and look, but you talked about trump versus biden on some of these issues, isn't voters view them according to recent quinnipiac ball preserving democracy as don't want it had play a lot seven points, but he is losing his underwater. and what the israel-hamas more in russia, ukraine, war morrow, i mean, what do you explain that? because trump has barely talked about what his policy is on the israel-hamas war or on ukraine for he's been pretty clear they're on ukraine. he was impeached the first time because he held up military aid to ukraine. >> what about how to end this war? yeah, you know, except for that he'd ended on day one. this one was the president. but what's interesting about that the bad numbers on gaza are about internal democratic divisions that young people and progressives are angry with biden about that. >> i think that as if biden can succeed in conflating foreign policy in the threat-to-democracy, which is pretty high up on those list of concerns foreign policies way down. >> but democracy is way up. you can conflate them. i think that can help him. and what really struck me about the president in europe? >> the things he said could have been said by any president. >> in other words, of course, we're going to defend democracy and our allies. but because he's running again, someone on a pretty openly authoritarian platform who said nice things about putin disparaged nato allies, said we don't really desert, belong in ukraine. it's not our fight. that's what made this contrast. so explicit. >> what we want to turn to, what you have is what just some breaking news here about a major issue that the president is going to confront and dealing with immigration right now, if you look at this is isaac story from this morning, biden nears huge next move on. immigrations. you tries to win over latinos in key de, it's this past week, he moved forward in an executive action that angered a lot of folks on the lab to try to clamp down on migrant crossings at the southern border. >> this time a shift. >> what is it? >> what are reporting is that the president is very close to moving forward on what would be the next round of executive actions. it would be to make work possible legally for long term undocumented immigrants who are married to americans. and sounds like a small group. it's actually about 800,000 people predominantly latino, when you think about the effect that this has, it's not just on those people themselves, it's of course, on their spouses under kidd on their whole networks around them, that really makes a reverberating effect through millions of people by the way, many of those people concentrated in arizona, nevada, georgia, places of the president has been behind a specialty with latinos. there's a political benefit here, but to folks who are been involved with this, this looks a lot to them like daqqa to 0.0 this time 2012, it was june 15, 2012, barak obama created the daca program for people who had been brought here as children, unknowingly to, so that they could be legal status that to a lot of people was one of the turning point moments for obama's reelection campaign. there is a deep desire to replicate that both in terms of the policy effect here and in terms of the political effect. >> yeah the political factors. >> one thing we'll look at it right now obviously, both polls show that biden is struggling with on the issue of immigration is what it is major vulnerabilities. but how to biden's bars versus trump supporters look at the idea of undocumented immigrants and whether they should be able to stay in the us legally if certain requirements are met the, recent pupils that 85% of biden supporters would are supportive of that. but just 32% of trump's support such a divide here, but it's clearly he's moving. you could say, to the left to try to placate those concerns is hearing one, how he's been heroine certainly, i think it reflects the kind of cross pressures he's feeling when the number of issues not only immigration before and policy, this is a president who's tried to be everything to everyone in a lot of points and with on both the border. >> and i think in foreign policy you've seen the difficulties on that. i think that biden okay. man, obviously with this is a strip that has flipped to a political liability and i think it's because democrats have not had an affirmative position on a lot of these issues. they have been able to criticize donald trump and republican actions, but there has not been a unified view from both top of the party to the base, but what to do about immigration, i want to do well, look abroad, but i think it's important that we don't see these issues as completely separate when people talk about the economy too often bring up the fact that we're that we're giving a lot of money to ukraine in israel when people talk about foreign policy, they'll bring it up preserving democracy. these things are working together and also biden's perception, even things like age, the perception of him is not in the driver receipt of kind of events, but reacting to advance, it's something that happens on the foreign policy states that is contributing to his perception of unpopularity domestically. so these things are all kind of all working together to create a really difficult picture for this president. but i think what we're seeing now is the, is the white house trying to take a more active role? and shaping ahead of this debate. so that by the time donald trump makes these arguments, he can point to very specific things that he has done recently, specifically on the issue but yes, isaac mentioned about the impact that lins doggone, the biden team looks kinda views this as daqqa tornado if you've covered this. very closely at that time, biden has struggled since then with hispanic voters. this is having any impact you think with that key demographic or is this something similar in any way to what obama did more than a decade ago? >> well, i was i was talking with some some people who work in this space and there are some much anger after the border executive action that the that the president role that this week, that there's some thought that they might not even want to praise whatever affirmative action that the administration roles that that would help these undocumented immigrants. but i think another thing to remember too, is that president obama in 20 hey, 14, rolled out something similar on executive action that was actually blocked by the supreme court and was never implemented. and now i'm sure biden's team. i'm sure biden's lawyers are trying to make sure to craft this proposal in a way that they feel could withstand scrutiny. but first of all, the supreme court is a lot more conservative now that it wasn't in 2014. and he's already going to he could do these things either on the border or on that. it could get blocked by the courts. and then what does that do? then what does that do? those people who he's trying to thwart such a good morning. >> i'm sure republicans will have something to say this as well. all right, gumming up next is retribution on the ballot in november, we'll dive into present trump's former president, trump's new calls for revenge and my new reporting on how far his party is willing to go to back them up are you going to vote for trump? >> now, when can make mano tonight on the whole story, how to drag becomes such a target for the political right? do you think drag queen story? >> course can be family-friendly? >> know, if they don't want a world of tolerance, stay should be afraid. >> the whole story with anderson cooper tonight at eight on cnn, it's kubota, orange days year's biggest election of komodo equipment get 0% apr for 84 months or up to $3,300 off select kotb back directors, find your nearest dealer at your botha orange days.com we can carousel my tiny patches she's improving the look of her fungus damage now, while she is only carousel patches work for up to eight hours to reduce this coloration and thickness. >> now, that's what i call, the udp sleep tarasoff nighttime patches. >> we've got you covered when you're the leader the cleanup and restoration, how do you make like it never even happened sir for like never even happened. >> okay. ready to ask me? 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we're waiting for donald trump to pick a running mate. we'll see who it is, but that puts her in this position where she can continue just going at trumping going at it the him in a way that i think actually speaks to where a lot of the democratic voters would like more democrats to be the response from joe biden and from the biden campaign overall, to donald trump's conviction is just stays convicted felon, not really talk about the details of it, and not really talk about it that much even at all. >> and that that has struck a lot of democrats in the wider world is a sort of strange approach given that they would like you to brace as you may get more part of your message. >> their goal here is to beat donald trump and part of that would be from making him more disqualified in the eyes of voters, harris went ri