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we ve literally been up all night but it was worth it. change from new york for us. we are in a big shake-up in the republican race. i wrote it as a question, but i m saying it as a statement. here s why. donald trump for the first time did not look invincible last night, he took heat from all sides but it was constructive heat. the big name is not donald trump but carly fiorina, could she make it on the big stage? she owned it for most of the night. also jeb bush, showing the highlights what were the lowlights and highlights, john berman is at the reagan library. it s like a smoldering battlefield the day after. i think i stepped on rand paul s kneecap when i walked in here. you saw the candidates going at each other hard on serious issues. you saw them try to execute their strategy. some with great success. others you be the judge. [ applause ] reporter: from nearly the minute the debate started, donald trump was the man in the middle. the middle of a pylon. his visceral response to attack people on their appearance, short, tall, fat, ugly, my goodness, that happened in junior high. i never attacked him on his look. and believe me, there s plenty of subject matter right there. that, i can tell you. reporter: there was trump v. paul, trump v. fiorina about the rolling stone argue what he talked about her face. i think the women all over this country heard very clearly what mr. trump said. i think she s got a beautiful face and i think she s a beautiful woman. reporter: no she did not seem impressed nor was jeb in trump v. bush. the subject, the remarks trump made accusing bush for being soft on immigration because his wife was from mexico. i hope you apologize for that, donald. i hear she s a lovely woman. she is, why don t you apologize to her. i can t do that. i hear she s a lovely woman. reporter: the 11 were begging the moderator for the chance to get in the game. jake jake jake reporter: all with the need to break through, carly fiorina, the newcomer to the stage touched the crowd with sting videos targeting planned parenthood. anyone who has watched this videotape, i declare hillary clinton, barack obama, to watch these tapes, watch a fully formed fetus on the table. its heart beating, its legs kicking while someone says we have to keep it alive to harvest its brain. reporter: marco rubio flashed passion and knowledge on foreign policy. the number one issue a president will ever confront and the most important legislation that the federal government has is to keep this nation safe. today, we are not doing that, we are eviscerating it. reporter: and trump and fiorina flashed their business backed in a tit for tat. i run as ceo. she can t run my companies. you were using our people s money and you were forced to file for bankruptcy. i made over $10 billion. reporter: so what, who cares, said governor chris christie? the fact is, we don t want to hear about your careers, back and forth about who did well and who did poorly. you re both successfully people, congratulations. reporter: the debate did have lighter moment or higher. as the case may be. 40 years ago, i smoked marijuana, and i admit it. i m sure a lot of people won t want to say it in front of 25 million people. my mom s not happy i just did. reporter: it came as trump s proposed presidential code day. it s very high energy, donald. humble. [ laughter ] reporter: and not to be outpartied, lindsey graham who made waves in the first debate with hard-edged anti-terror policy. i have a plan to destroy radical islam because it has to be. these are religious nazis running wild. reporter: he also came out for hard liquor. that s the first thing i m going to do as president, we re going to drink more. [ applause ] strongest comment of the night, some say. let s discuss and bring mac maeve reston, cnn s international reporter, john brownstein. and errol lewis. thank you. when you look at it last night, people had tests. we re not all talking about donald trump as someone who ran away with it. who made it and who fell short jp. donald trump had trouble staying in the detail of policy. fiorina, rubio, bush, walker, i think there were six in all, but when he wasn t doing that, he wasn t really, i think, as front and center at all. look, i think carly fiorina, marco rubio had had very strong nights. i think chris krity and rand paul reasserted themselves, and i think jeb bush had some good moments. i thought john kasich laid out a theory of the case. republicans have lost five out of six elections. that s the backdrop here. they re looking to get in the white house. with kasich and graham all about outreach. and people like ted cruz and donald trump and rick santorum and bobby jindal are more about mobilizing the base. i think you saw a party that is still in search of the formula that will take it back to the white house. that was my big take-away from the debate. hey, errol, what did you see? i thought fiorina did extremely well. i will agree with ron that there was a lot more diversity. there were a lot more interesting conversations and policy differences than we ve heard up until now. the head line had that donald trump issues a personal insult, a juvenile remark. instead, you actually had a policy debate. there were some very interesting differences between the candidates like, what to do with marijuana policy. there are some think it s a gateway drug and shouldn t be used at all. there are others who felt differently. it was a fascinate three hours. carly fiorina may have shut down several conversations with insight and is intelligence on medical marijuana. she did it a different way. tell us what happened with that. kind of surprised the crowd. that was an interesting moment where she actually got personal and talked about losing a child. in her case, it actually was her stepdaughter. but it was really an unusual moment for her. she doesn t usually show that more revealing personal side. so, that certainly, was something that people will be talking about, going forward. and it was startling because people hadn t heard that story. she looked right into the camera. she said, i know about this, i lost a child. people said, what does that mean? she has in her book, this is a new plan for her it sounds like. right. it certainly was not during the 2010 campaign for senate. it was certainly something that was talked about but more kind of like in the shadows. it wasn t something that she brought up. the test for fiorina is do you stand toe to toe here or the gravitas or just a business person? this was a conversation about medical marijuana that was sort of getting into the weeds. as it were. all right. but listen to this. listen to the actual moment, you ll see how she elevated what had been a petty conversation. i very much hope that i am the only person on this stage who can say this, but i know there are millions of americans who will say the same thing. my husband frank and i buried a child to drug addiction. so, we must invest more in the treatment of drugs. up to this, it had been federal, state and then this. her conclusion, to that point, it was a very dramatic and personal moment, it humanized her more than anything else. there was one downside of the performance. it seemed a little scripted at moments. it was her conclusion. the conclusion is, the war on drugs has been a failure. chris chris tishgs the war on drugs has been a failure. rand paul. i mean, we saw some new notes here. in the house of reagan, right? right. you had rick santorum and ben carson talking about raising it. donald trump defending progressive taxation. as i said, we had a really wide range of views about what is the policy mix that would lead republicans to getting back the national majority which after all is the point of this. you can lose sight, when you re in the bubble of a primary and you re talking to your own people of whether you re on track to actually produce a winning majority. walter monday daily thought he was producing a winning majority. this guy behind us won 49 states that year. and republicans have to i think, you know, the hard part is keeping two things in sight at the same time, nomination and building a majority coalition at the general election. we started with the graphic saying does trump stay on top after this. what are people saying? what s the reaction? this campaign has been donald trump versus everyone else. i think the question that will be answered in the coming days is this, has his support been built on the ridiculous moments, or in spite of the ridiculous moments? do they need, the supporters need that crack, that political crack to keep going? we didn t really get that much. yeah, there were a few moments. i don t know what he did to rand paul. he went after his looks. but what we saw was trump talking about the issues, you know in a much less caustic way, so although without much substance, right? we thought he was going to do something else. into we thought he was going to be more statesman-like. the face of his campaign. as the policy discussion got deeper and deeper into the evening, that is when donald trump completely receded. he did not jump in the way christie and dors. i think it s interesting that it could be if you follow that, it could be then that it s just time that wears trump down. it s not one slipup. people waiting for the big slipdown. trump is not likely if trump does not move all the way through this, more like plateau than collapse. i agree, trump, i thought, really receded as the policy debate got deeper. i thought one reception. donald trump is running twice as well with republicans without a college degree. in the abc news/ washington post poll he was at 40% among noncollege republicans. he. and do you believe his number comes down? i think it will come down a little bit. i think again, i think it s more the question for trump, i don t think he s going to nothing happened last night that will cause him to collapse. when he said, in this country, we speak english, not spanish. that s again, what i was going tos that is something that is talking to the people that he is attracting which is ultimately an issue if you re looking at november 2016. i m sorry, we have to leave it there. we have so much to talk about this morning, errol, we owe you one. john, thanks so much. on new day in the 7:00 hour, we ll be speaking live to carly fiorina about her performance in last night s debate. what did she think was the best and most memorable moment and also governor christie here. in the 8:00, we re going to hear from the democratic side with contender bernie sanders. what did he like? what did he not like? also up next, we re going to have the interview with donald trump right after the debate. you often get the best sense of how they feel about themselves, here s a taste. it was a beautiful time. i had an amazing time. he was tired. he also may have been a little bit shell-shocked, although he said, of course, he did very, very well. how did the voters see it. we have trump in his own words next. the first step to reaching your retirement goals is to visualize them. then, let the principal help you get there. join us as we celebrate eddie s retirement, and start planning your own. where their electricity comes from. they flip the switch and the light comes on. it s our job to make sure that it does. using natural gas this power plant can produce enough energy for about 600,000 homes. generating electricity that s cleaner and reliable, with fewer emissions it matters. [whirring of drones] just stay calm and move as quietly as possible. no sudden movements. google search: bodega beach house. (underwater noises in background) (scuba diver speaking french in background) say this tube is a 4g lte wireless network. verizon keeps your data flowing fast and steady. but some budget networks slow your data after you reach your limit. you can barely watch your shows. this is no way to treat people. a better network doesn t mess with your data. (underwater echo) can a a subconscious. mind? a knack for predicting the future. reflexes faster than the speed of thought. can a business have a spirit? can a business have a soul? can a business be.alive? just like eddie, the first step to reaching your retirement goals is to visualize them. then, let the principal help you get there. join us as we celebrate eddie s retirement, and start planning your own. all right. back here in simi valley, california. what just happened? i ll tell you what the race for the gop nominee has changed, that s what happened. donald trump did not dominate. we saw a different donald during and after the debate. we spoke to him in the first post debate interview he did. he seemed to feel the strain. take a listen. so, after speaking to your family, what did they say about how you were tonight? they were very proud and happy. it was a beautiful time. i had an amazing time. three hours is a record-selling debate. i guess you were selling a lot of commercials during that. so they increased it. i guess it was supposed to be two. they were very professional the way they handled it. cnn did a great job. well, we agree with that. who do you think came out on top with the best ideas for the american people? i think everybody did very well. nobody did poorly. i was very impressed. anybody more than anybody else? i would never say. i think certain people did really well. carly fiorina is getting a lot of good buzz coming out of the debate? i think she s a really nice person. really, i think everybody did well personally. do you feel that you did something differently tonight than you did in the first debate? no, i think probably the first debate went very well for me also. they both went very well. they re saying very nice things. i just heard a couple people come over and say, wow, that was great. i think i m very happy with both performances actually. there seems to have been more discussion amongst the candidates during the breaks and after here in this degrebate th the first one. i think that s true. well, we re getting to know each other. even though it s tough, we are getting to know each other. you develop relationships. i have a lot of repeekt for people on the stage. what have you learned after tonight? well i learned i have no trouble standing for three hours. literally, it must be a record. i hope that the audience is okay. i actually think it s a little too long. i learned that we have a lot of talent in the republican party and i think we re going to do very welcome election day. when you look to your left and right, do you think you still stand above those who want the job? i ll never say that. i think i ll do a great jobs. i think i ll be the greatest jobs producer than there ever has been in this country. that s what i do ceo, i was number one in leadership, number one in terms of economy with jobs. you know the fall very well. many times. i think i would certainly do an unbelievable job of putting the country back to work. and literally, i think people would be extremely happy and extremely prould of our country. you can point to anything you heard tonight where you listened and thought, you know what, i like that idea, i think i m going to use that? well, i think i think i heard a lot of things we ll discuss it at your show at length because i have a whole family here. do you have a process? what are you doing now? i m getting on the plane to new york. new hampshire, iowa. i m going all over the place. we re having a lot of fun. the phones have been amazing. the receptivity has been marvelous. in dallas, we sold out the mavericks arena. in mobile, alabama, 31,000 people. the response has been incredible. they like what i m saying. what does it mean to your family in the crowd, your daughter and son? it s great. to have them, they seem to be so receptive. i could see they were giving me the high-five. well, bianca must have liked. we had a good time. if the polls come out and trump was on top, would you be surprised? no i wouldn t. i think everybody did very well but i think i did very well. first of all, he was very tired. he keeps talking about the time, i think there s two reasons, he s right. it was a long debate. two, it s harder for him, everybody is coming at him and he knows it it so he has to be aware. i think last night, the game elevated around him. i think he s going to have to figure out what that means to him. by the end of your little chopper, he segued back to vintage trump. it was great. i m great. he was a little shell-shocked. at first. i think carly fiorina hit him with shots last night he didn t expect. there s so much to talk about, the reviews are pouring from this hour from last night s gop debate, trump, fiorina, bush, they re the ones getting the buzz. were there any casualties of the showdown? we ll talk about that when our debate coverage continues. big day? ah, the usual. moved some new cars. hauled a bunch of steel. kept the supermarket shelves stocked. made sure everyone got their latest gadgets. what s up for the next shift? ah, nothing much. just keeping the lights on. (laugh) nice. doing the big things that move an economy. see you tomorrow, mac. see you tomorrow, sam. just another day at norfolk southern. awe believe active management can protect capital long term. active management can tap global insights. active management can take calculated risks. active management can seek to outperform. because active investment management isn t reactive. it s active. that s the power of active management. ooñóokñ.??????ó i was going to the library to do my homework. it was a little bit of a walk to get to the bus stop. i had to wait in line to use the computer. took a lot of juggling to keep it all together. what s possible when you have high-speed internet at home? the library never closes. it makes it so much better to do homework when you re at home. internet essentials from comcast. helping to bridge the digital divide. we don t need an apprentice in the white house, we have one right now. if i were sitting at home watching this back and following, i d be inclined to turn it off. kids who have privilege like you do, don t go to jail but the poor kids in our innercities go to jail. you should ask questions about the foreign policies our president will confront because you better be able to lead our country in the first day. i ll tell you the truth, they could care less about your careers, they care about theirs. the chatter online seems to be focusing on three candidates, carly fiorina, donald trump and jeb bush. but there were a lot of candidates on stage but were there any casualties pip joining us is amanda carpeter. former j.w. bush political director of theed me. great to have you guys. what a night. wow. okay, let s talk about some of the candidates that are not getting as much buzz this morning. and whether or not they were able to see some bump. let s talk about scott walker who is, right after, i found him in the screen room and we had an exchange about the poll numbers, let s listen to this. you have been struggling a bit in the polls, do you think tonight was a breakthrough moment? what i heard in iowa, a lot of people said to me in cafe and diners, you re one of my top two out there. i want to see the passion when you took on the union bosses and the washington-based special interests, i think we showed that tonight. did any of the lower candidates have a breakflew moment? no i don t think so. nobody really blew it which was a little bit of a price, i think what people did, they fell into type cast. huckabee, strong to conservatives. christie, the tough prosecutor. rand paul, legalize drugs, they kind of, these candidates that are having trouble breaking through, they fell into their niche. niche isn t going to get it done. scott walker, i think it was 30% than the first one. let s fold in jindal, santorum and lindsey graham into that as well. that s right. if you fall into the niche, naturally, you say it s not enough, but there is a survival, this is an existential battle going on. when the numbers shake out who do you think moves down? i have a hard time thinking ben carson maintains his number two status. you don t think he was strong enough? i don t think he was strong enough. particularly, he gave bizarre answers on the minimum wage. two minimum wages and as sort of to reasonableness. this is kind of stuff that isn t the conservative bloodstream by any means. also, let s talk about donald trump, as candidates talked more about issues, he faded away. do you thing his number goes down in the next poll? it s hard to say because he s been so bulletproof in this experience so far. but he did not hang on to pose issues. his numbers are not going down. his number s not going down. he appealed to the same voters he s been appealing to. they don t want details on policy. they want him to take a 2 x 4 to washington. mercedes, good or bad? obviously, carly dominated the stage. it was amazing with that first answer. i think we were waiting for that big punch against trump. but she really made up with it along in the performance. i d also say senator marco rube beyoshgs when he talked about the foreign policy, very subt substanti substantive, going after trump on that issue. saying you got to be ready with day one. i think jeb bush came across with a lot of humor and really able to be more relaxed and again take a punch at donald trump. again, donald trump, there was a point where he was speechless. there was like 37 minutes of silence that you didn t hear donald trump. quite frankly, he was so uncomfortable talking about any issues except for immigration which going back to matt s point, the niche. we did see donald trump level his answer on immigration. he didn t change it but there was more empathy. but this wasn t about a measuring stick for him. although you make a great point as the conversation elevates will he match pace? i still think donald trump had a test last night. he had to stand next to jeb bush and say you are not stronger than i am. here s what had happened. did mr. trump go too far in invoking your wife? he did. he did. you re proud of your family just as i am. to subject my wife into the middle of a raucous political conversation was completely innape, i hope you apologize about that donald. i have to tell you, i hear phenomenal things. i hear your wife is a lovely woman. she is. she s right here. why don t you apologize to her right now. i won t do that because i said nothing wrong. she s a lovely woman. amanda, that was just like an awkward sandwich right there. what was happening? who do you think came out better in that exchange? listen, jeb had to show he was willing to engage donald trump in this debate. he tried to do it several times. if i were being attacked and my husband was standing up for him. i wouldn t expect him to say i hope you apologize. he should have said apologize now. a lot of women were listening to that. i think jeb was feistier in this debate. jeb doesn t come across as a schoolyard bully. jeb comes across as the bookish kid who is thoughtful. but he fought back. ammercedes, what was your impression? for jeb bush, the conversation was the w. one area you don t go to is his wife. and i think what he said, is wait a second, we got to stop attacking not only my wife but immigrants in general. i think he was throwing in his remarks. thanks for all your perspectives. let s get to mik in new york. yeah, obviously, the debate ahead. first, breaking news overnight. at least five people are dead, several others are hurt, following that powerful 8.3 magnitude earthquake that hit central chile wednesday. the quake hit northwest of the capital of santiago and triggered massive waves along the coast. 1 million people have been evacuated so far. massive flooding, submerged several communities. we re getting some reports of strong aftershocks. tsunami alerts meanwhile has been posted for peru, hawaii, southern california and new zealand. we ll keep an eye on that situation. as breaking this morning, the government in jeopardy, heavy gunfire by security forces. multiple reports saying they were warning shots to disperse a group at the capital s main square. the burkina faso elections. and jen motors expected to admit that 2 mislead the government in faulty ignition switches tied to at least 100 deaths. an official announcement is expected as soon as today. gm has recalled millions of vehicles to fix the ignition switches at a cost north of $4 billion. a gm spokesman declined to comment. 6:35, the crew and i have been enjoyi ing empanada out he. how is the mexican food in california, kids? oh, you had to do that. weak spot. i know. all right, mikaela, eat up, we ll be back shortly. race changed last night. the question is, who is it good for? who was it bad for? right now dr. ben carson is running a strong second for the republican nomination. some are suggesting he may not stay there. did he do enough? we re going to talk about carson s debate with one of the members of his team, his friend and business manager, armstrong williams. there he is. good to have you, sir. we ll talk to you in a moment. at ally bank no branches equals great rates. it s a fact. kind of like mute buttons equal danger. .that sound good? not being on this phone call sounds good. it s not muted. was that you jason? it was geoffrey! it was jason. it could ve been brenda. welcome back. time for cnn money now, your money. the federal reserve is behind closed doors. a big story for your money. a key moment, the final sign of the chi s return to normal led by fed chief janet yellen, they must determine if the u.s. economy is strong enough to take away the low interest rates that have been propping up the dhee for six years. here s how you ll feel it. when the rate hikes, banks raise the prime rate, car loans, home equity lines of credit. private student loans. the inevitable rate hike, and it is inevitable, it will gradual. if you re on the fence about buying a home, you still have time to lock in that rate. there are thought it could happen today. back in a moment. [ music continues ] introducing the one-and-only volkswagen golf sportwagen. the sportier utility vehicle. without the internet i would probably be like a c student. internet essentials from comcast has brought low-cost high speed internet into the homes of hundreds of thousands of low-income families. it lets students do homework and study at home. so far more than two million people across america have benefitted. internet essentials is going to transform the lives of families. i see myself as maybe an entrepreneur. internet essentials from comcast. helping to bridge the digital divide. they were trying to set up you against donald trump in terms of how you felt about deporting the 11 million undocumented immigrants. but it seems you didn t take the bait. i didn t, and i offered him an opportunity to explain how that could be done. but he didn t do it. not surprising. i mean, did you think that he gave enough specifics? probably not at this stage of the game. that was part of our post debate interview with dr. ben carson commenting on the performance of his biggest rival on stage last night, donald trump. how did carson do on everything. let s bring in armstrong williams, he s ben carson business manager and on xm radio. armstrong, good to see you. i want to start with that moment, that was a great opportunity for dr. carson that he didn t take. donald trump didn t explain how he was going to deport the 11 million estimated undocumented immigrants here. and dr. carson could have gone at him stronger, somehow, he seemed to be treating trump with kid gloves, what do you think? good morning, he was not treating anyone with kid gloves. actually, it s just his style. he feels that the american people are intelligent enough to understand that the question was not answered. and he did not need to remind him, because he s just not combat eye. but i ll tell you that may surprise you and chris is that dr. carson was far better last night than he was in the first debate. he s getting more and more comfortable with the format. the format allowed a lot of conversation back and forth. dr. carson clearly wants to be a gentleman. he doesn t want to get in your face. he wants to state his position. he got a chance to state a position, whether it was on the minimum wage. whether he was talking about the free phones, there s nothing free. whether he was talking about iraq he got into foreign affairs. dr. carson continues as he is to gain momentum, to gain steam, and we don t think in any way that his favorability ratings will be impacted in any way. he will remain steady. it s never been his goal of the campaign to always search ahead because you become the target. as long as you stay within the top five, he s very satisfied with that. okay. well, then it comes to your measure of success. i ve moving my hand back and forth, maybe no, maybe yes, armstrong. some people say he didn t do enough to solidify himself as number two. you re saying he s okay being in the top five. but it go to the demeanor of a fighter. people want a fighter for them right now. especially in tough times. dr. carson said he s from detroit. last night, he had a chance to take on fights but he didn t. he showed scrutiny. he s in no rush to come back on the show with me because he doesn t like what he said about gay say choice. and do you think he has to defend himself and defend his position showing that he s better? you know, fights take place in many arenas, chris. doesn t necessarily mean they take place in a national debate where you have little time going back and forth. when dr. carson is in iowa, south carolina, new hampshire and these other places and these formats, people see his fight. they see his spine. they see his back done. they see he ask explain these issues in great depth. he goes back and forth. that is why when dr. carson is away in areas away from the big lights of the cameras that he s able to connect. it just does not play to his strength. sometimes, you have to realize the strength and weaknesses of people. dr. carson will not be the combative one. he ll never be aggressive. you ll never see the fire in him that saw in others. you just have to accept it. when you ve been a pediatric surgeon for almost 30 years, you have to remain calm and remain engaged with every movement of that body. it s not going to change all of a sudden because he s on a national stage and a presidential candidate. we don t have those expectations for him because it s just not realistic. you know, armstrong, there was something else going on particularly in terms of body language. it wasn t that he was picking a fight with donald trump. he almost seemed differential. they shared a high five, a handshake. what was that about? of course, you know the answer to that, mr. trump obviously was the one who initiated all the high-fives, the handshakes. it was not dr. carson. what do you think dr. carson is going to do? he s not going to reach back? he s a gentleman. armstrong, i get it. but you sound like you re making the case for somebody to be the chief neurosurgeon in a hospital. being president of the united states is not something that just plays out in private. you engage the people publicly. you know this, and you know how to do-it-yourself very well. it can t be when he s with 14 people he s very strong. when he s in front of 14 million, he likes to sit back. this is a leader. it s about coming out and being your best on the biggest stage. the question is, will he do that better going forward, what s your thought? chris cuomo, listen, he s better at that with the 14 million than 11 people on stage. listen, dr. carson is dr. carson. the american people understand his gentleness. they can see his fire. they can see his strength. there s no without question, that he s a leader. chris, you and i both understand that leaders are sometimes formed differently. and they re formed differently for our times. and while you may feel you need the fight of a donald trump, and the fire. and the kind of strife that we see in the world and the domestic policies that we have to confront in this country, while you may want more from dr. carson, i understand you want more because it s more entertaining and more pleasing to the eyes and ears but for dr. carson he will always be a quiet, thoughtful, interactive and methodical leader. it s not going to change now between now and the next presidential elections. it s not going to change. it s who he is. and voters seem to be responding that he is different. you re right about all of that, armstrong williams, thanks for being on new day. and as a study and contrast, we ll have you on again, armstrong. thank you. dr. carson popped in the polls but so did carly fiorina. boy, did she go about it differently than dr. carson and everybody else on that stage. she s here, we re going to talk to her live about how she brought it last night. what is her opinion and how it s go forward. we also have governor chris christie, he played an interesting role. the 8:00 hour, we got the other side, senator bernie sanders. what did he think about last night and how does he size up? 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(bird screeching) i wonder why they save those backups. and not just put them in the regular rotation. i bet if they just had the chance, some of those backups would really shine. no matter what happens, a reliable network has your back. i was going to the library to do my homework. it was a little bit of a walk to get to the bus stop. i had to wait in line to use the computer. took a lot of juggling to keep it all together. what s possible when you have high-speed internet at home? the library never closes. it makes it so much better to do homework when you re at home. internet essentials from comcast. helping to bridge the digital divide. but you can count on our 1,000 americas and canadas best value inns for room discounts, upgrades, instant rewards, and a home town touch. welcome back to new day. last night, the republican debate took center stage. and this morning, we want to hear from the voters and the viewers. so here with us is jacob kolhep, an undecided voter leaning towards marco rubio, gael thomas, and daille thomas. you all watched on television. let me start with you, what did you think about donald trump s performance? i thought it was wonderful. i thought he held his own. he did very well. he was a bit toned back but donald trump speaks exactly what the u.s. needs to hear. let s play a little of what he said last night, we ll ask you what you think, go ahead. first of all, rand paul shouldn t even be on this stage. i never attacked him. believe me, there s plenty of subject matter there. i heard governor pataki who by the way was a failed governor in new york. say very serious failure. folks in iowa found out about the job you did in wisconsin, all of a sudden, you, too. when you hear him taking people on, whether it s in response or gratuitously, mario, what about it makes you like him more? well, donald trump is a very savvy businessman. he knows exactly what he wants. he knows what the united states needs. donald trump taking on people who have attacked him is simply his way of getting back. but donald trump knows exactly what his plan is for the u.s. have you heard those plans? i don t think i ve heard all of them. i think i ve heard enough to get my vote in his corner. dale, what did you think carly fiorina s performance. i thought carly did a fabulous job. i definitely thought she won the debate hands down. she s smart, she s savvy and she s got the right face to lead this country. you there go. and that was a big moment, where she said the women around this country have heard you clearly in response what what donald trump said. what did you think was her breakout moment. i think that was a breakout moment i have respect for a woman who can use a scalpel instead of a sledgehammer to get the job done. and she did. jake, what stood out to you? i think carly fiorina definitely stood out a lot. i think like we said before, she was concise, she was on point. she wasn t afraid to fight back which i think is important. i think she represented california voters as well. i think it s great that we somebody not from the political class rising up. the last time we saw that, we saw something great. you were leaning toward marco rubio going into this? i was, yes. is it because you look like him or what resonates? it s definitely not because i look like him. it s because marco resonates points concisely and clearly. i listened him talk several times. he never messes up. he keeps on point. every time he says something he knows what he s talking about. a demonstration of that came on foreign policy where he shone a little bit. let s tack take a look. you are saying don t have the knowledge that mr. trump has? you should ask him questions about the foreign policy that the president will confront because you better be able to lead on the first day. our president could very well face a national security crisis. you can t predict it. sometimes, you can t control it. now, you said you saw other people, carly, you liked that he s from california. did rubio help or hurt last night? i think he wasn t allowed to speak as i would personally like. i think when he did speak, he showed he had the knowledge and messages to get across. i think people like rubio and carly resonate with people of my generation, the millennial generation. that s because rubio is able to present conservative points in a way that hits home with people. i think he s able to be principled, while also being kind and uniting. i think that really showed during the part where he discussed how his grandfather came from cuba. how he adopted conservative principles, even though he didn t fully speak english. mario, i want to ask you about donald trump again. jake tapper tried to get specifics out of him about the 11 million undocumented immigrants, how did they go with that? are you okay with him not explaining his plan? i m okay with that. what you saw last night was every other politician already telling us how arduous this task was going to be. each and every one of them said what a fiasco it would be to do this. donald trump is not speaking of that. donald trump knows the issue. the issue is that wall. it has to be built. he knows that moving them out is not something that can t happen, it has to happen. the how, to you, you think he ll figure out? he s a business man, he s a builder. he s an engineer. he knows exactly how it will be done. besides, moving them out isn t really the issue. we ve got to build that wall. we need that wall built. we need it done. everything starts at the wall. inside that wall things will start to develop. things will start together, it will become focused for the u.s. mario, gale, jacob, thanks for coming in. we have so much more of our continuing debate coverage. let s get right to it. more energy tonight, like that. i dare hillary clinton, barack obama to watch these tapes. i m a republican in new jersey. and this about is changing the system. his visceral response to attack people on their appearance. i never attacked him on his look. we are in fact the a-team. 40 years ago i smoke marijuana. first thing i m going it do as president week going to drink more. i think women all over this country heard very clearly what mr. trump said. she s a beautiful woman. it s very high energy, donald. [ laughter ] [ applause ] good morning, everyone. welcome back to this special post debate edition of new day. mikaela, of course, is isn t new york with other news. christian and ire coming to you live from the reagan library in simi valley, california. home of second republican debate. it was seen right here last night on cnn last night. this was anything but the donald trump show. in fact, some people say he receded into the background as other candidates took center stage. i ll tell you one reason if people believe that is because of the woman sitting right next to us right now. carly fiorina is the name coming out of the debate the most this morning. social media, the different assessments of the debate. you know her, the hewlett packard ceo, landing clean blows on trump, but also in her own cause. some of the most memorable moments. she s got a big smile on her face this morning. good to see you. morning. smiles not something too much we saw from you last night. what was your mind-set going in. and what do you think worked for you? well we were talking about serious subjects last night in many cases so a smile is not always appropriate. look, going into last night, half the audience had never heard my name and didn t know i was running for president. so it was really important opportunity for me to introduce myself to the american people. and to show them that i can win this job and i can do this job. a lot of people were waiting for a moment that you and donald trump came to blows, or had some sort of exchange. and there were many of them. so let s watch a little portion of you and donald trump last night. you know, it s interesting to me, mr. trump said that he heard mr. bush very clearly. in what mr. bush said. i think women all over this country heard very clearly what mr. trump said. [ applause ] i think she s got a beautiful face and i think she s a beautiful woman. what did you think of that moment? what did you think of when he said that you have a beautiful face and now you re a beautiful person? you know, it s still different for women. it s only a woman whose appearance would be talked about while running for president. never a man. and i think that s what women understand. that s why women understood what donald trump said about my face in the first place. and also what he said about my face in the second place. the point is, women are half this nation. women are half the potential of this nation. but somehow, we still spend a lot of time talking about women s appearance. instead of their qualifications. what gave you the wherewithal and desire to do what nobody else has done in this race on your side the field yet which was i m not just going to wait to respond to donald trump. i m going at him and toe to toe. and i m going to fight him. you did that more than anybody else last night. why? well, first, i hope it s pretty clear that i am a fighter. i have also been the most vocal critic of hillary clinton on the campaign trail. presumably the democrat party s nominee. this is going to be a fight. this is an important election. and we re going to have a fight about really important principles. and really important policies. and really important differences. so if you can t fight on a debate stage, then you re not going to be able to stand up and fight for the american people. and the american people are looking for a fighter. they know this is a pivotal time in history they know these are important issues i m prepared to fight. you did something different last night. you shared a personal moment about a tragedy in your family. let s listen. i very much hope that i am the on person on this stage who can say this, but i know there are millions of americans who will say the same thing, my husband frank and i buried a child to drug addiction. so we must invest more in the treatment of drugs. that surprised people that you had that in your background. you can tell us more about that? well, there are so many families who have gone through this or are going through this. and it is an epidemic now. in so many parts of our country. drug abuse? yes. drug abuse. we don t invest in its treatment. we need to tackle criminal justice reform. but anyone who s gone through this, shows that it is tragic to watch someone s life ebb away in the clutches of the demons of addiction. speak to that, mrs. fiorina. look, there s an emotional place when you open up your life like this, but you know that is part of politics. it is. and certainly something that you thought was important enough to say on the debate stage. what was it like for your husband, people say it s weakness of character, it s poor choices, it s criminal behavior. what did you learn through your own life about the realities of this problem, what s misunderstood, what s needed? well, this can afflict anyone. it afflicts millions. it is described in so many communities in our nation now as an epidemic. it touches every part of our society. it s not just about poor. it s about poor middle class, rich, men, women, young, old. we the war on drugs has failed. we need a different approach. i mentioned criminal justice reform briefly. you know, we have the highest incarceration rates in the world. two-thirds of the people sitting in jail are there for nonviolent drug-related offenses. it s not working. we re not investing enough in this. and so, it s a terrible tragedy, while of course it s difficult to talk about, i think it s also very important to talk about. so that families that are suffering through this know that they should not feel ashamed or stigmatized. that we must produce help. that we need to invest more. you know, it s interesting when i m on the campaign trail and sometimes this will come up, always, and it s so generous of them, but always people will come up to me and say, the same thing is happening to me. we re suffering with this in my family. two people came up with me last night after the debate and said i lost a child to addiction. i want to ask you about your experience during the debate. it seemed to me, this is unofficial, i was trying to take notes, that you got the most applause. the things that you said, the crowd responded to the most. were you surprised at how much applause you got last night? you know, i ve been out on the campaign trail since may. and despite the fact that i have, before last night, at least, the lowest name i.d. in the field, people respond. so i am not surprised that people respond. because actually, folks are tired of politics. they re tired of politicians. they re looking for leadership. so i could engage the applause. you know, i was very focused on what was happening on that stage. and thinking about what i wanted to convey. but i m not surprised that people respond. i ve been out there a long time talking to a lot of people every single day and i know how they response. i ll take the other side of it, i think there s a different experience with you re in close settings like this and the big stage. i m not saying you were intimidated by it. we thought you were going to do well last night. you just did better than we even expected. but they re looking for a leader. but it s going to be a person they pick, not just policies. the fair criticism of trump is you have to put meat on the bones, you explosioned that last night. but they need to get to know carly more, who is carly? who is she somebody that she can feel safe with and somebody that cares? you know, i started out as a secretary in a nine-person real estate firm. my story is only possible in this nation. and it s proof, actually, that everyone has potential. every one of us has god-given gifts. i know that. i ve seen it over and over again. so, i come to this with the firm belief that no one of us is any better than any other of us. each of us has enormous potential. and i m running for the presidency of the united states because i truly believe, and so do the american people, that their possibilities are being crushed, regardless of their circumstances. this is about, i think, a leader in the oval office who will provide the opportunities. the tools, the support, every single american, regardless of their circumstances, to finally use their god-given gifts. i ve been through very bad times. i ve buried a child. i ve beaten cancer. i ve had good times and bad. i have been tested. and i m not going to falter on this campaign and i won t falter in the white house either. i heard you described this morning as donald trump s kryptonite. you can take that as you will. what did you think about his performance last night? was donald trump as feisty as you were expecting? i think the audience has to decide what they thing of donald trump s performance. listen, honestly, i will tell you the truth, i think we have spent the media, frankly, has spent way too much time talking about the entertainment aspects of this. the performance aspects of this, donald trump, personally. i think people, when i m out on the trail, i m never asked a single question about donald trump. the only people that ask me about donald trump are the media. what voters want to know is what s going to impact their life? they re concerned about their lives. so, i hope going forward, people can decide what they thought of donald trump s performance. that s not for me to say. but i really hope going forward that we can have a more substantive conversation about the things impacting people s lives. did it go better than you expected last night? well, i certainly was hoping that i would get an opportunity to say what i wanted to say. you took the opportunity. yes, i did. you weren t always given them. you took them. that is part of what you were going to do. that is true as well. as i went through the i think, i had things i wanted to say, i would write them down. i got lieu all of the things i wanted to say. i would have notes to myself. i d like to make this point. i got to my point. i m satisfy. i bet. that s a big about accomplishment. thanks so much for getting up early with us. you. you guys are up early, too. great talking to you, carly fiorina. you re always welcome on the we re calling it same day. . you just heard from carly fiorina getting a lot of buzz. and we re also going to hear from governor chris christie. he played an interesting role last night, you ll hear from him live. and then what did the opposition think? democrat bernie sanders what did he like? what did he think was good for him last night? and we ll also here from jeb bush s campaign manager is going to say why they succeeded last night. next. but first, we have a very special guest. come on out, flo! [house band playing] you have anything to say to flo? nah, i ll just let the results do the talking. [crowd booing] well, he can do that. we show our progressive direct rate and the rates of our competitors even if progressive isn t the lowest. it looks like progressive is not the lowest! ohhhh! when we return, we ll find out whether doug is the father. wait, what? big day? ah, the usual. moved some new cars. hauled a bunch of steel. kept the supermarket shelves stocked. made sure everyone got their latest gadgets. what s up for the next shift? ah, nothing much. just keeping the lights on. (laugh) nice. doing the big things that move an economy. see you tomorrow, mac. see you tomorrow, sam. just another day at norfolk southern. your brother and your brother s administration gave us barack obama because it was such a disaster last those three months that abraham lincoln couldn t have been elected. you know what, as relates to my brother, there s one thing i know for sure, he kept us safe. i don t know if you remember [ applause ] a very different jeb bush took to the stage last night. he spoke solidly on policy. defends his family and his record. most directly to and against donald trump. so, what kind of night did he have? is it going to change this fate? does he answer the questions he needed to? campaign manager danny diaz, it s important to have you. it s about what jeb bush did last night and why he wanted to do it. what did jeb bush want to show about himself versus trump? just the understanding do we have the candidate with the most accomplished conservative record in the field. we wants to community that, to highlight that he has the achievements in florida, creating jobs, putting money in the rainy day account. cutting taxes, year after year, aaa ba bond rating, he has a str record. right after the debate you tweeted something. you said fact at jeb bush shut down at donald trump. what was it that you thought shut him down? mr. trump felt that mr. clinton was the best qualified person to negotiate the iran deal. and he talked about keeping his brother safe. and i felt like governor bush was very strong in that moment. and when he discusses the issues and he s providing substance. you know, that s a comparison that we like a lot. well, look, the tweet stands in contrast to the answer you gave before. i understand why, you re balancing a line. at some point with trump and bush, you ve got this man-to-man issue here that has developed between the two. and it came out in a discussion about jeb bush s wife last night. let s play the moment. did mr. trump go too far in invoking your wife? he did. he did. you re prod of your family just as i am. to subject my wife into the middle of a raucous political conversation was completely inappropriate. and i hope you apologize for that, donald. i have to tell you, i hear phenomenal things. i hear your wife is lovely. she is, he s fantastic. why don t you apologize to her right now? i won t do that because i said nothing wrong. i do hear she s a lovely woman. i get what he was trying to do there. for this to be effective. didn t he have to tell trump, not i hope, not please do. apologize. is that what he was trying to do? to effectively communicate the message when donald trump is running across the country making offensive comments i think that was brought to the floor tonight. from the governor s perspective, we like this comparison. i think we have the best message. we welcome the opportunities to verse ourselves. i understand the moment, what was the beef? all donald trump had said he thought governor bush would be more simple sthet tick to mexicans because he married an immigrant. where was the offense? why was that so insulting? i think donald trump has absolutely tried to castigate folks. and he tried in this case. his values are what he is, and what he believes. i thought governor bush pointed that out clearly. he was looking to his right last night a lot which is where trump is. how about looking to his left. with carly fiorina. carly fiorina ate a lot of people s lunch on that stage last night. she was strong and aggressive. she did to trump what i guess you were trying to do with governor jeb bush. she went right at him. what did you think? i thought carly had a good night. i thought jeb had a good night. we understand it s one night of a long campaign. this morning, it s get up, back in the field. we re not going to elect a president in september. we re going to elect a president next year. we have a campaign that s durable. well financed and strong support. i m very confident when all the cards are dealt around the table that jeb bush will be the nominee. where quickly, where does that focus next? new hampshire, nevada, south dakota. we believe, once again, this is about the most important office in the country. is he on a big ebb coming up? bigger than before. say big ad right now i hear number us of $25 million. what s the message? best conservative will match up against anybody in the field. thank you for coming on new day. extend the invitation to the governor. we d love to have him on. you got it. there were fireworks from the start, hope you tuned into the cnn debate. a lot more from donald trump and rand paul. he actually did talk about his looks. he said i could, because you re ugly, but i m not. does that count? i think that counts, yes. ere. join us as we celebrate eddie s retirement, and start planning your own. at ally bank no branches equals great rates. it s a fact. kind of like shopping hungry equals overshopping. just like eddie, the first step to reaching your retirement goals is to visualize them. then, let the principal help you get there. join us as we celebrate eddie s retirement, and start planning your own. without the internet i would probably be like a c student. internet essentials from comcast has brought low-cost high speed internet into the homes of hundreds of thousands of low-income families. it lets students do homework and study at home. so far more than two million people across america have benefitted. internet essentials is going to transform the lives of families. i see myself as maybe an entrepreneur. internet essentials from comcast. helping to bridge the digital divide. while i m as entertained as anyone about this personal back and forth about the history of donald and carly s career. to the 55-year-old construction worker tonight who doesn t have a job and can t fund his child s education, i ve got to tell you the truth, they could careless about your careers. they care about theirs. you re both successful people. you know whose not successfully the middle class in this country getting plowed over by barack obama and hillary clinton. let s stop this childish back and forth between the two of you. that was new jersey governor chris christie unloading on two of the outsiders on stage, of course, that was trump and fiorina last night. there were a lot of fiery moments. let s talk about them with maeve reston and washington correspondent jeff zeleny. let s talk about that. was that effective saying you guys are too childish? do people want to see them engage with one another? i thought it was effective. i think was one of chris christie s better moments. people sitting at home aren t all that sympathetic to the donald trump and carly fiorina back and forth. it was the side of chris christie the bully we like to see. kind of a nice bully who is sticking up for the kid. construction worker. the construction worker. and speaking of those fights, trump came right out of the box and did what we were told he would not do, which was just go straight at somebody gratuito gratuitously, let s take a look. i think really there s a sophomore quality that is entertaining about mr. trump. but i am worried i m very concerned about having him in charge of the nuclear weapons. i think his response, his visceral response to attack people on their appearance, short, tall, fat, ugly, iness, that happened in junior high. would we not all be worried to have someone in charge of the nuclear weapons. mr. trump. i never attacked him on his look. and believe me, there s plenty of subject matter right there. fair point. fair point, though, had he didn t start it. that s the test for donald trump. that s what he always says, that he didn t start it. there s been plenty of back and forth between those two. that was completely gratuitous, sort of off the top. i think it set the wrong tone going into the debate. they were talking about nuclear weapons and he pivoted to rand paul s looks. yeah. paul said there s a sophomore quality for him. it was definitely a moment for donald trump to rise to the occasion and show he could be a different candidate. he chose not to do it. the question for donald trump, traditional rules apply. is he going to stay where he is and not evolve as a candidate. i think that was an example, he is who he is. i thought it was actually a funny moment. rand paul is not that sympathetic of a character. especially last night, he was dow dower. he was dower. can we talk about donald trump s lack of a poker face. he was like leaning on the podium. he went through the whole emoji thing. but why? remember who he is? this guy knows who he is. how do you get attention on television? you make a face. he s able to get attention. he s not presidential. the faces he was making were not presidential. were they working or not work for the voters? entertaining. he knew the split screen was up. again, i think it works for donald trump, but was he try to be presidential on the stage last night? who even knows what it means anymore. i got slapped around in an interview, when you return every barb that comes your way, it s not presidential, you got to rise above. people came at me saying who are you to say what is presidential. presidential is what pleddial is presidential is in the moment. there are no rules. i want to talk about the debate with the lower sphere of candidates. that was entertaining, substantive debate. and lindsey graham, people thank, i saw michael reagan, one of president reagan s sons, he said lindsey graham is on fire because he had so many zingers. let me play for you just one of what he says he would do if he were president. round rnald reagan did a couf big things that we should remember. he sat down with tip o neal, the most liberal guy in the entire house. they started drinking together. that s the first thing i m going to do as president. we re going to drink more. so, i mean lindsey graham in the first debate was not the usual lindsey graham. this was vintage lindsey graham last night. tons of zingers. he s witty, quick off the cuff. that was a lively, substantive debate. that served as a take-away for all of this. republicans had a lot there to like among the other candidates last night. did any of them jump to a different echelon? i think lindsey graham could. there are some on fumes their campaigns are too big. scott walker. this fund-raising period that s about to end at the end of this month say key moment here. so he may be in the next debate if a couple people drop out. we don t know if they will or not. lindsey graham is lean and mean. it s him in a rental car across the country. he could be in the next debate. the standings changed last night. that s my prediction. i m not saying in dramatic ways. i m not saying that donald trump is not on the top. it will be interesting when the first polls come out. maeve, jeff, thanks so much. chris christie played a very unique role that was in a way christie-esque. and in a way not. he s going to come on, the governor of new jersey and tell you why he does what he feels. and in the next hour, democratic candidate bernie sanders. you ll get a chance to feel the burn, ladies and gentlemen. right now, let s get to mich in new york. i ll do that. first, breaking overnight, five people are dead several others are injured following that powerful 8.3 magnitude earthquake that hit central chile wednesday. the quake hit northwest of the capital of santiago. it triggered massive waves along the coast. we understand 1. people have been evacuated as massive flooding submerged communities there. several strong aftershocks were also reported. tsunami alerts have been issued for hawaii, southern california, peru and even new zealand. military prosecutors will lay out their case against ugg army target bowe bergdahl today. bergdahl faces charges of desertion. after the hearing. a judge advocate will be asked to decide whether the case should proceed to court-martial. there s support for a 14-year-old texas boy who was arrested after bringing a homemade clock to school. some of his teachers thought resembled a bomb. president obama has invited ahmed mohamed to the white house for astronomy night next month. he also received all sorts of reports and invitations from facebook and google to visit. mohamed won t face charges over the incident, however he says he plans to transfer schools now. supporters believe that he was targeted because he is muslim. those are your headlines. 33 minutes past the hour. well, the debate wasn t just must-see tv. it was a must-tweet event. did you follow along on twitter? 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[ laughing ] [ music continues ] introducing the one-and-only volkswagen golf sportwagen. the sportier utility vehicle. who knows, one of these kids just might be the one. to clean the oceans, to start a movement, or lead a country. it may not be obvious yet, but one of these kids is going to change the world. we just need to make sure she has what she needs. welcome to windows 10. the future starts now for all of us. why are you deleting these photos? because my teeth are yellow. why don t you use a whitening toothpaste? i m afraid it s bad for my teeth. try crest 3d white. crest 3d white diamond strong toothpaste and rinse. .gently whiten. .and fortify weak spots. use together for 2 times stronger enamel. crest 3d white. i was going to the library to do my homework. it was a little bit of a walk to get to the bus stop. i had to wait in line to use the computer. took a lot of juggling to keep it all together. what s possible when you have high-speed internet at home? the library never closes. it makes it so much better to do homework when you re at home. internet essentials from comcast. helping to bridge the digital divide. welcome back to new day. last night s republican debate, boy, took social media by storm. did you watch and tweet at the same time? this was fun. we can break down the trends and see what everybody is and was talking about. we want to take a look, though, at the first of the three top trending moments. moment number three, obviously a contentious moment in the debate. trump versus jeb on jeb bush s mexican-american wife s heritage. let s take a listen. you can hear the exchange. i hope you apologize for that donald. i hear phenomenal things. your wife is a lovely woman. she is, she s fantastic. she s right here, why don t you apologize to her right now. i won t do that because i said nothing wrong. he said he said nothing wrong. should jeb bush have pushed further with him. number two moment, carly fiorina taking aim at planned parenthood. in has become a lightning rod for gop contenders this campaign season. one of her quotes, while someone says we have to keep it alive to harvest its brain, that s getting a lot of play. but i kind of need a drum roll from the guys in the studios. nothing, guys? come on. here s the number one trending moment from last night s event. carly versus trump. jake tapper asking carly to respond to that article in rolling stone magazine, look at that face. many women have regarded it as an attack on her looks. she fired back. i think she s got a beautiful face and i think she s a beautiful woman. here s the question, was she buying it? i don t know. i don t know. another thing we can look at are the top mentions on twitter. you can see going into the debate, donald trump was already strong in the polls. he was strong on twitter getting 22.7% of the mentions. the next highest with 8.62 percent is jeb bush followed by carly fiorina who had a strong performance last night as well. air time, you can see how things measured up, last time in the fox news debate. this time around, i believe if i touch it, we ll show you how we did last night at cnn debate. donald trump getting the most time, just under 20 minutes. bush coming in at 18. we put something together a little fun. a world cloud. there you go, trump was a big conversation. and surprisingly, at the round reagan spreadial library so was reagan. tough talk from new jersey governor chris christie, he targeted everyone from hillary clinton to carly fiorina and donald trump. chris christie joins allison and chris ahead. when you do business everywhere, the challenges of keeping everyone working together can quickly become the only thing you think about. that s where at&t can help. at&t has the tools and the network you need, to make working as one easier than ever. virtually anywhere. leaving you free to focus on what matters most. 800,000 hours of supercomputing time, 3 million lines of code, 40,000 sets of eyes, or a million sleepless nights. whether it s building the world s most advanced satellite, the space station, or the next leap in unmanned systems. at boeing, one thing never changes. our passion to make it real. our passion to make it real. the human foot has always been good at. it s unleashing great power. the is performance line just got a power boost. introducing the lexus is 200 turbo and is 300 awd v6. the is line has never been. more powerful. once driven, there s no going back. who knows, one of these kids just might be the one. to clean the oceans, to start a movement, or lead a country. it may not be obvious yet, but one of these kids is going to change the world. we just need to make sure she has what she needs. welcome to windows 10. the future starts now for all of us. good to have you back on both coasts on new day or same day depending on what you re calling it. last night while the republican candidates were duking it out on the debate stage, far away, hillary clinton flexing her cch. on jimmy fallon. anyway, i was fantastic, you love me. i know you re about to do an interview with jimmy fallon, but he s a total lightweight. [ laughter ] so i m going to do you a favor and interview you instead. that s great. you know how much i love being interviewed. as long as you don t start talking over me when i m trying to make a point. mr. trump insults and dismisses women, but tell me, what would you do to help women in this country? donald, i ve spent my entire career fighting for women s rights. i ll push for equal pay in the workplace. for protecting women s health and reproductive rights. making quality affordable child care a reality for families. that s what i believe in. that s what i m fighting for. you know, i m really curious, donald, what is your stance on women s issues? look, i know a lot of women and they all have issues. [ laughter ] [ applause ] what i loved is that she s genuinely having a ball. did you see how much she enjoyed that appearance? yes. that last one, where she seemed to actually be laughing, right. if she can have a good time in an interview with donald trump, she should do more interviews and come on same day. fmaybe if you change the nam of the show to same day she ll come? what do you think? i think the parody of donald trump is just like it. it s too good. it s not a parody. it s mimicking. i can t tell the two apart and now i m a little confused and embarrassed. well, i want to point out to you that hillary clinton is going to be here at cnn. we re guessing that it s going to be a slightly less irreverent interview with our wolf blitzer, you can tune into that at 5:00 p.m. eastern here on cnn. take it away, team. all right. we want to bring you the players from last night, new jersey governor chris christie, certainly one of them, played an unique role in last night s debate. he set his sights on democratic front-runner hillary clinton. he kept trying to turn the rest of the field back towards her. and towards the problems, instead of the infighting. and now, he joins us, chris christie, governor of new jersey, sleepless man. good morning, we all had no sleep. how did you think it went last night? i was really happy with it. listen, you always want more time. i thought the moderators did a good job of trying to move it around to different folks in response to the dynamics on the stage. the most important thing is, i went on the campaign trail for the last months people are tired of hearing candidates talk about themselves. and they want to hear them talk about what their problems are. i heard carly talk about how much money she s made and lost. how much donald s made and lost. let s stick to they re both successful business people in their own right with their own successes and failures. that does nothing for the person sitting on the other end of the camera. you made that point quite vociferously in the debate. let s watch that moment. while i m as entertained as anyone by this personal back and forth about the history of donald s and carly s career. 0 to the 55-year-old construction worker who doesn t have a job who can t fund his child s education, i got to tell you the truth, they could care less about your careers. they care about theirs. you re both successful congratulations. you know who is not successful? the middle class that is getting plowed over by barack obama and hillary clinton. let s stop this childish back and forth between the two of you. you know, when i first heard you doing it, i loved when you did your interesting statement, you said turn the camera, in your initial statement, show them. that s who it s about. if i were a moderator of the debate, that s how exactly i d be. you became a little moderator in that. there s a balance in that. really, you re supposed to be making the case as they are. how do you balance saying i don t like what s going on here. i need to be making the case the way i want to because i ve heard from the voters. i ve done more town hall meetings in new hampshire than anybody. i ve done 22 so far and counting. we ll be back next week. this is what i m hearing from people on the ground in inew hampshire, in enough of donald s success and carly s success and jeb s family. i want to hear about my family. not so much a moderator, but reorient it to try to get the folks thinking about what they should be thinking about. when you walk in the oval office in january 2017, i want the american people confident that i ve heard them and that my actions are what i ve heard from them what i believe in my heart. did you hear somebody say something that you never heard them say before? or anything that you didn t expect them to say? anything jump out at you? i starts speak and then carly tried to threaten me again. listen, he s got one place on the stage, not two or three. my view on her is be curtis. don t interrupt me. don t interrupt the other candidates. it s tough, though, to avoid the phenomenon that is trump. you ve taken them on a little bit. you went on a morning show this morning that pretty much gives free reign on the air from big blocks of time. can awe void being part of that game? can you actually stay consistent in saying i m not going to play this game? i think i can, chris, i think you saw me do it last night. there were a couple times, jake, god love him, was trying to get me into a fight with donald trump. i m not going to do it. donald and i are friends. i think i ll be a much better president. i m not going to get into the back and forth like carly did. that gives donald, 16, 18 minutes because people want us to see us fight with him. my fight is with hillary clinton. that s where the real fight is, with what barack obama has done the last seven years, not with donald trump. it s with those folks. so i am going to stay focused on that. i can t guarantee every day i m doing it because i m human. the format last night was not necessarily to start a fight. but it was to engage. and it was to have a real debate. you would say something and then another candidate could challenge you. that was by design. it as states, there are a lot of people on that stage. do you think last night moved the needle in terms of some people might be getting out at some point soon? you would hope so. again, that s such a personal decision. but i wouldn t push anybody on that, they ve got to make up their own mind. i like the format. in general, i like the format. i like the fact that we re engaging and i thought jake did a nice job for the most part. i thought for the most part there was a candidate or two that decided they re going to run everybody over. moderator butts in. and now it s about the moderator. sure, it s a little trickier, it is. do you think you re in a better position after last night. yeah. a lot of smart politicians who know me well tell me this, the more people get to know me, i do better. the i went from six minutes to seven minutes last night. i m making incremental progress. wait a minute, you only spoke for seven minutes? seven minutes. were you timing it? someone told me that. here s the thing, i ve always been a guy about quality over quantity. always. so when i get my moments, i m going to make them count and make people hear me. i ve never been misunderstood in my political career. what do you wish was asked that wasn t asked? do you think that somebody should have been pressed more? no, i think they should have done a pretty good job of pressing folks. i think as people get more and more of a spotlight, they re going to be pressed more. i d like to hear more about carly s time at hewlett-packard. there was controversy about. and that will be an interesting thing for them to talk about but not ad nauseam during the debate in people s backgrounds and what they ve done. people know generally what they re going to do. i think generally they ve covered more than they covered before. fact-checkers were on you about when you were appointed u.s. attorney and named? i got the call from the white house september 10th 2001, from judge gonzales the president s council saying, i have selected you. and then everything happened on september 11th. then my appointment was put off baugh every fbi in america was working in america as they should have been and not doing background checks on presidential appointees. but i was named september 10th, 2001. go back and check the newspaper. that s when the president named me. i didn t take office until january. jeb bush got big applause saying my mother kept us safe. did you think that was odd given the fact that he was president in 2011? no, i supported what he said because i worked for george w. bush. he and attorney ashcroft came to all of us in 2002, waiting for the next attack to happen and prosecuting the people who did it is no longer the way to do business. we have to stop them before they act. i feel very empowered as a u.s. attorney in our region of the world to intervene to do what we needed to do. i thought just what the president did as well. i think what jeb did is right. a lot of people have forgotten about that, but in the more dangerous world, they re starting to remember. governor chris christie, we know it was a long night, thanks for being here. thank you. thank you for being here. thank you, and hillary should come, too. secretary clinton, these are good people. come talk to them, i always have fun here. thank you, that s a strong endorsement. carly fiorina talking tough at the republican debate last night. she turned the tables on donald trump. did any of her hits actually land and make impact? we talk about the highlights, the lowlights. we re live from the reagan library. welcome to fort green sheets. welcome to castle bravestorm. it s full of cool stuff, like. my trusty bow. and free of stuff i don t like. we only eat chex cereal. no artificial flavors, and it s gluten-free. mom, brian threw a ball in the house! who knows, one of these kids just might be the one. to clean the oceans, to start a movement, or lead a country. it may not be obvious yet, but one of these kids is going to change the world. we just need to make sure she has what she needs. welcome to windows 10. the future starts now for all of us. hey! so i m looking at my bill and my fico credit score s on here. yeah! we give you your fico credit score. for free! awesomesauce! the only person i know that says that is. lisa? julie? we ve already given more than 175 million free fico credit scores to our cardmembers. apply today at discover.com every auto insurance policy has a number. but not every insurance company understands the life behind it. those who have served our nation. have earned the very best service in return. usaa. we know what it means to serve. get an auto insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life. the 306 horsepower lexus gs. experience the next level of performance, and there s no going back. lease the 2015 gs 350 with complimentary navigation system for these terms. see your lexus dealer. this is about changing the system. rand paul shouldn t even be on the stage. there is a sophomore quality that is entertaining about mr. trump. i promise if i wanted i would have got interest. stop this childish back and fort. i want that on the record. you better will able to lead the country the first day. we don t want to hear about your careers. this is about the character of our nation. i think she s got a beautiful face and i think she s a beautiful woman. good morning. welcome to this postdebate edition of new day or as allison is calling it same day because we ve been up all night on this thursday september 17th. 8:00 in the east but here it is 5:00 a.m. in simi valley california. we re back after the republican debate and as promised it has changed the state of the election. donald trump is not the big name coming out of last night. the question for him is will he keep the size of his lead. not that he s going to drop from first but did the field shift last night it looks like yes are and for good and bad reason. candidates fired salvos of substance. the big name from last night, carly fiorina. jeb bush was also looking for momentum after what some call a bounce back performance for him. who shined brightly? who fell flat? our debate coverage begins from last night. hi john. i was actually walking by the debate stage area and they are already breaking it down. like they are removing the evidence in a crash site. and that was what it was. like a multivehicle collision with all these forces going right after each other. there were some who landed their blows. others well take a look. from nearly the minute the debate started donald trump was the man in the middle. the middle of a pile on. his visceral response to attack people on their appearance, short, tall, fat, ugly. my goodness that happened in junior high. i never attacked him on his look and believe me there is plenty of subject matter right there. that i can tell you. there was trump v. paul, trump v. fiorina about the rolling stone article where he talked about her face. i think the women around this country heard very clearly what mr. trump said. i think she s got a beautiful face and i think she s a beautiful woman. no she did not seem impressed. nor was jeb in trump v. bush. the subject, remarks trump made accusing bush on being soft on immigration because his wife was born in mexico. i hope you apologize for that. i hear phenomenal things. i hear your wife is a lovely woman she s fantastic. to the love of my life and she s right here. and why don t you apologize to her right now. i said nothing wrong but i do hear she s a lovely woman. all with a need to break through, carly fiorina, the newcomer to the main debate stage touched the crowd with a reference to sting videos targeting planned parenthood. anyone who has watched this videotape, i dare. hillary clinton, barack obama to watch these tapes. watch a fully formed fetus on the table. its heartbeating, its legs kicking, while someone says we have to keep it alive to harvest its brain. m mar. the most important obligation the federal government has is to keep this nation safe. and today we are not doing that. we are eviscerating our military. and we have a president that is more respectful to the ayatollah in iran than he is to israel. and flashed business backgrounds. i led hewlett packard through the worst technology recession in 25 years. you ran up a mountain of debt and you were forced to file bankruptcy. i made over ten billion dollars. the fact is we don t want to hear about your careers. you are both successful people. congratulations. the debate did have some lighter moments. or higher as the case may be. 40 years ago i smoked marijuana and i admit it. my mom s not happy they just said that. the big last came with bush and trump code names. ever ready. humble. and lindsey graham made waves in the first debate. i have a plan to destroy a radical islam. because it has to be. he also came out for hard liquor. that is the first thing i m going to do as president. we re going to drink more. game, set, match. who can argue with that logic. lindsey graham endorsed by jack daniels. stick with us. we want to bring in maeve reston and ron brownstein. to me what really jumped out above all was the divergence in the viewpoint on the core question the party faces, which is how do you get back to the white house after you have lost the popular vote in five of the last six elections. we saw very different versions what it takes to do that. kasich and bush arguing we have to expand the coalition and other candidate, trump i think, cruz, jindal in the first debate arguing we have to mobilize the exist i existing. and not i mentioned donald trump in the divergence on where to go but yes, donald trump, when he was not insulting other candidates or questioning their qualifications he receded quite a bit in this debate. he says in first place but do you think donald trump may see his first vip slip at this debate. i think there are a lot of people out there who seized the opportunity to take aaway some of his voters. carly fiorina last night having a very strong performance. i do think we could see trump plateau here. at the same time we ve all been saying things like that for a while and we ve been proven wrong. so it is very difficult to prick the dynamics in this race. to ron s point you did have republicans have a lot to see there last night and a lot to choose from. differing strategies for taking the white house back. also just a lot of tonal differences that were really interesting to watch in realtime. a lot of people were watching bush last night. to see if he would fight back? what his tone would be? and he did talk about his brother last night in a different way than we ve heard before. your brother and his administration gave us barack obama because it was such a disaster those last three months that abraham lincoln couldn t have been elected. you know what? as it relates to my brother there is one thing i know for sure. he kept us safe. i don t know if you remember [ applause ] you remember the rubble? you remember the firefighters with his arms around it? he sent a clear signal that the united states would be strong and fight islamic terrorism and he did keep us safe. do you feel safe right now? i don t feel so safe. was that an interesting situation given that his brother was president during 9/11? there are two reasons for the applause. number one, that audience in the room the 500 people were the establishment people still connected to the bushes right there. the second thing is george w. bush isn t at unpopular as he was inside the republican party. so particularly in the primary states you look at the numbers he s not the weight around the neck they thought. and i think the third thing is the well-crafted answer from jeb bush right interest. it wasn t exactly what trump was going. trump was calling w. a disaster on the economy and getting us into iraq and everything. he wasn t saying anything about 9/11 but jeb turned it there. and. think about how much he struggled with that answer over the last couple of months. it was finalliliy like all righ jeb nailed it. with an issue he s had so much trouble talking about his family and figuring out what to say about iraq. that was one of his stronger moments. i don t think he wants to run as the brother of the george w. bush and if that is the strongest moment it is problematic. yeah. one of the things to keep in mind is enormous as this field is and i think most of the strategists in the campaign really believe they are running there are two different races occurring. two brackets being fought out. off kasich, chris christie. lindsey graham maybe from the first debate. carly fiorina trying to establish the center right. more up scaly, focused primarily on new hampshire. and then the more conservative bracket where people like trump and cruz and huckabee and santorum. ben carson, who are looking to more popular voters. more evangelical. and they are aimed at iowa. so it is not all against all. i think most campaigns still think you are going to end one one finalist from each of the brackets and to a larger extent they are competing against each other. jeb bush s biggest problem today is not trump electorally. it is john kasich. the beating the heck out of him on one side. right. and let s look at the moment people were waiting for and this is a moment carly fiorina would respond to donald trump s unkind expressions about her face. here it is. you know it is interesting to me. mr. trump said that he heard mr. bush very clearly and what mr. bush said. i think women all over this country heard very clearly what mr. trump said. i think she s got a beautiful face and i think she s a beautiful woman. i mean, that moment was just obviously the highlight of the debate for a lot of people. it showed you everything that makes carly fiorina just a really good candidate in one respect. incredibly disciplined. i mean the face control coming out of that. and then, you know, donald trump come back with almost doubling down on kind of a cringe ji moment for women. you know i think that the other interesting part of that is that we saw a bunch of the candidates start to go after her on her hp record and that is going to be her biggest vulnerability going forward. once you are rising to the top you are going to get the target on your back. did you notice a little half smile on donald trump s face before he responded on that tape. almost like a professional acknowledgment like that was well done. he respects the fighting. apparently. and high five. awkward creepy old guy high five but a high five. thank you for that, coming up we will talk more about the debate. so many good guests to talk about. and also democrat bernie sanders is going to join us live later this hour. what did he think as he watched the television of what was going on last night? people don t have to think about where their electricity comes from. they flip the switch and the light comes on. it s our job to make sure that it does. using natural gas this power plant can produce enough energy for about 600,000 homes. generating electricity that s cleaner and reliable, with fewer emissions it matters. we told you that the debate would change the race, and it did. the rivals squared off. trying to get your attention. and it seemed to work. donald trump was the focus, but probably deba didn t come away dominant. the name we re all hearing is carly fiorina. what does this mean? when the new numbers come out, donald trump maybe doesn t have the same lead. might see his first slip in the polls. he betrayed no lack after of confidence when he spoke to him right after he stepped off the debate stage. what did your family say about how you were tonight. they were very proud and very happy and it was a beautiful time. i had an amazing time. three hours is probably a record-setting long debate. but i guess you are selling a lot of commercials doing that. they increased. it but they were professional the way they handled it. cnn did a very good job. we agree about that. seemed like it was well run. who do you think came out on top with the best ideas for the american people. i think everybody did well. nobody did poorly. and really everyone did very well. anybody more than anyone else. i think certain people did really well. i would never say that of course. carly fiorina is getting a lot of buzz. i think really everybody did very well. do you feel that you did something differently tonight than you did in the first debate? no i think probably the first debate went very well for me also. they are saying very nice things. i just heard a couple of people come over and say wow that was great. so i think, you know, i m very happy with both performances. there seemed to have been more discussion among the debates before and after here in this debate than the first one. well we re getting to know each other. even though it is quite tough and sometimes a little nasty we re getting to know each other. and you know you develop relationships. i have a lot of relationship for a lot of the people on the stage. what have you learned after tonight. i ve learned that i have no trouble standing for three hours. you know, i mean literally it must be a record. i hope that the audience is okay. because i actually think it is a little bit too long. but i learned that we have a lot of talent in the republican party. and i think we re going to do very well come election day. when you look to the left and right tonight, did you still feel you stand above those who else want the job. i would never say that. i would never say that i do. i think aisle do a great job. i i aisle be the greatest jobs producer there ever has been in this countrcountry. i was number one in terms of leadership and number one in terms of economy and jobs. and i don t mean by a little bit. you know the poll very well. by many times. and i think i would certainly do an unbelievable job putting the country back to work and i think people would be extremely broud of our country. did you hear anything tonight where you listened and thought i like that idea. i heard a lot of things. and we ll discuss it on your show at length. because i have a whole family now. what now? i m getting on the plane and back to new york. then i m going up to hb new hampshire tomorrow afternoon and all over the place. the polls have been amazing. just amazing. the reseptemberiviceptivity has incredible. in dallas we sold out the arena. in mobile, alabama. 31,000 people. the response has been incredible. they like it they agree. how does it feel to have your family. it s great. to have them and they seemed to be so recipientive today. i could see they were giving me the high five and high sign. ivanka must have liked it when you said you should be on the ten dollar bill. tomorrow. after the polls come out and they say trump was on top would you be surprised? no i wouldn t be. i think i did very well. kwhafs your impression when we first came off the stage? tired. i think tired because of the duration. it was a long night. and also because of the intensity. i think this was a different night for donald trump. everybody raised their game. it wasn t just about quick one-liners. carly fiorina was firing a bazooka with substance at him. she took him on what he said about her and much much more. i don t think he was used to that. at the end he got his mojo back. where he said it was all terrific. i did very well. i m hearing great things. even though that was mostly from miss family at that point. but he was back to vintage trump. the first time i ve actually heard donald trump want to end the interview. he was ready to go. he was tired. i heard that. what did the democrats think last night? we ll talk to presidential candidate bernie sanders straight ahead when same day i mean new day continues. when you re not confident you have complete visibility into your business, it can quickly become the only thing you think about. that s where at&t can help. at&t s innovative solutions connect machines and people. to keep your internet of things in-sync, in real-time. leaving you free to focus on what matters most. we have heard a lot this morning from the people on the right. those who were in the debate last night, those who watched as the race changed. but what about the other side? are they shaking in their boots? are they satisfied with what they heard? do they feel better now? senator bernie sanders was live tweeting during the debate. a lot. senator debate, frsanders. you are tweeting. you say you got bored. you fell asleep. what were your doing online last night, sir? it was really painful. i have to say of this to you. i couldn t go on the full three hours. i gave up after two and a half. look, their view it goes without saying that my views are different than theirs. but what was really remarkable is the degree to which they avoided the major issues facing the american people. and believe that every single problem facing humanity is all attributed to barack obama. he has caused all of the problems. we seem to have forgotten that when bush left office 800,000 people were losing their jobs every single month. the world s financial system was on the verge of collapse and the deficit was 1.4 trillion dollars, record breaking. senator, let me give people a taste of some of the twitter storm you are stirring up last night. here is one on immigration. you wrote anyone on stage maybe just maybe think we might want to pass comprehensive immigration reform and a path towards citizenship? anyone? i m sensing sarcasm, senator. yes it was sarcastic. but if you listen to the debate you would not know that most of the people in our country, not all but most of the people, in fact do believe that we need comprehensive immigration reform and a path towards citizenship. that is the majority opinion. and yet there was virtually no republican on that stage who agreed with that. i also found it remarkable that some of the really important issues facing our country. income and wealth inequality, not discussed a i all. the fact we have the highest rate of childhood poverty of any major country on earth not discussed at all. the fact that the scientific community is virtually unanimous in telling us climate change is real. it is a real threat to this planet. these guys had nothing to say on that issue. here is the other side, senator. they were saying things, you just didn t like what they were saying. reverse order. climate change, they said yeah okay it is there but it is not for the federal government. let the states deal with it more. federal government doesn t van answer. in terms of poverty and income they blame you. saying you tax people into a position they are in and locked up business. and notably on immigration they say that is on you too. your party president, caucusing with the democrats they say brak bomb promised and he didn t get it done and these are all your problems. let s deal with that. first of all they do not believe in comprehensive immigration reform and that s why the house of representatives have not taken up the comprehensive immigration reform pass by the democrats with in a bipartisan way i should say in the senate. we did it. in terms of climate change, no, chris, i did not hear anybody say, oh, this is a planetary crisis. we have got to do something. really? the federal government should not do something? no scientist i know believes that. what they think is if we don t act now the situation will become much worse in late years. in terms of childhood poverty i didn t hear a word about the need to address the fact that 40% of african american kids in this country are living in poverty. nor did i hear a word by the way about racial justice in this country. the candidates as you know, senator, went after each other somewhat last night. and they also went after hillary clinton and they took sort of a sideswipe at you in the process. let me play for you what bobby jindal said. hillary clinton is gift wrapping this election to us. they are running their weakest candidate. they have a socialist who is gaining on the hillary clinton. folks you can t make that up. a socialist is doing well in the democratic primary. he says you can t make it up. it is stranger than fiction basically. your response? my thought is that the more the american people understand the kind of programs that exist in democratic socialist countries like den mark, sweden, norway, finland and other countries around the world where healthcare is a right of people. and public colleges and universities are tuition free. where the rate of childhood poverty is much much lower than it is in the united states of america. where you have much more income and wealth equality and don t haveities that we have in this country. where in many cases for those countries the standard of living there is a lot higher. and i know for a governor jindal it is easy to try to frighten people. throw out a word, socialist, oh my goodness we re all supposed to be shaking in our boots. but i think if we look at the success stories in these coun y countries there is a lot we can learn. when you say socialist it doesn t ring the right bell. the countries you are talk about the criticism is well it doesn t scale up. they are smaller populations. they can handle the tax burden differently and. what they are afraid of with sanders is that you are going to tax us to death in order to give to the people who need but you will be taking from everybody else too much. no i will not be. and chris, of course you re right in saying that country likes finland and denmark and sweden are much machine homogenous than we are. they are smaller but there are lessons that we can learn. why are we the only major nation on earth that doesn t garrett healthcare guarantee healthcare to all people. why are we the only major country on earth that doesn t guarantee paid family and medical leave so when a working class woman has a baby she s not forced to be separated from her baby and go back to work a week or two weeks later? why do we have the highest rate of childhood poverty of any major country on earth? why is it hundreds of thousands of bright young kids today cannot afford to go college? i think yes, the united states is a much larger economy, much more complicated, much more diverse society but there are things we can learn from governments which have programs that represent working people. and by the way another issue that did not come up last night in the debate is this disastrous citizen s united supreme court decision which allows billionaires to buy elections and maybe that has something to do with the fact that most of the people up there on the platform are super pacs which are funded by the wealthiest in the country. which forces them despite jeb bush s suggestion that he s not going to protect the interest of the people who fund him. well maybe he will and maybe most of them will end up doing that that. how do get money out of politics. how to help people make more money without having the tax burden go crazy. these are things to be discussed. as always we invite you to discuss it going forward and thank you for making your case today, sir. thank you very much. hillary clinton is also going to be on cnn. she ll give her first reaction to last night s debate in an exclusive interview with wolf blitzer at 5:00 eastern on the situation room. you don t want to miss that. see the look on her face, that is when wolf says a question she s like wow i can t believe how awesome that question is. there will be a lot of that. look forward to it. now the presidential candidate. they were trying to impress you that they have substance, not just one-liners. how about foreign policy? healthcare? the issues that matter you just heard sanders saying he didn t hear enough. who delivered the goods? we ll take look. i ve spoken of the shining city all my political life. god blessed and teeming with people of all kinds. living in harmony and peace. trump: they re bringing crime. they re rapists. if i am elected they re. going to be out of there day one. reporter: do you think birth right citizenship should be ended? walker: yeah, absolutely. cruz: i think we should end birth right citizenship trump: i will build a great, great wall. in my mind it was a tall proud city built of. rocks stronger than oceans. and if there had to be city walls. the walls had doors and the doors were open to anyone with the will and the heart to get here. that s how i saw it and see it still. just like eddie, the first step to reaching your retirement goals is to visualize them. then, let the principal help you get there. join us as we celebrate eddie s retirement, and start planning your own. welcome back. i m christine romans for cnn money now, your money. ask americans which woman should be on the upcoming remake of the bill. jake tapper asked the candidates last night who they would put on the 10. surprising answers. trump cruz and roubio want rosa parks. john kasich, mother theresa. she s not an american though. and jeb bush, margaret thatcher. ben carson chose his mother. carly fiorina rejected the premise. ironically obama gets the make the call. real madrid have about 450 million fans. we re trying to give them all the feeling of being at the stadium. the microsoft cloud gives us the scalability to communicate exactly the content that people want to see. it will help people connect to their passion of living real madrid. when tur ceo in a struggling industry as she said. well the question is did she make some bad business decisions that accelerated the layoffs, including the acquisition of contact which was a bad decision. the point i m saying is that the 30,000 laid off each of them could be the subject of a commercial. that issue, even though she has a good solid answer from her perspective would not go away. big issue, fiorina scored well on. what do we do on the war on terror? marco rubio wants to own this space. he said something i want your take on. let s listen. let s remember what the president said. he said the attack that he was going to conduct was going to be a pinprick. well the united states military was not built to conduct pinprick attacks. if the united states military is going to be engaged by a commander in chief it should only be engaged in an endeavor to win. and we are not going to thoroughbre authorize use of force if you are not putting the military in a position they can win. and they certainly do pinprick because we re using special ops and they are the best in the world and discreet mismissions. i. think he showed himself very strong on national security. and i think he did himself some good last night in the debate. he makes a very important point. three and a half years ago, there was lots of consensus that if you do not do something with isis, bringing your arab league partners in, being aggressive i think we ve had those conversations you are going to have a big problem. the president didn t want to deal with it. i this i his point was if we had dealt with it then in a more significant way we wouldn t have the problem we have now which is the most significant displacement since world war ii. we don t know who released the gas on these people and then a few days later we done a interview a few days later. he says i m bombing iran. i m bombing syria. i m going in there and doing it. rubio and others were very slow. they backed the president off. so pushback saying now you want to go big and bold and we said we were going to bomb syria early on. you were against it us. i thought rubio did well and i thought he did himself some good last might. they needed to engage in helping the president get that use of authorization in syria. i still think they need to do that. however the president has never worked it. never pushed on it. and he engaged in those bombing runs already. and he engaged in the plans we wanted and alls we ve done in syria is nibble around the edges. that is the heart and soul of isis? we have 56 fbi field offices. we have 56 investigations at least, one investigation per field office on isis in the united states. this is a big and growing problem. you are going to have to do something about it. and i think what rubio s point was, listen, we re issuing press releases. you are dropping a few bombs. it clearly isn t working. quickly, what was the moment that most struck you last night? i think that chris christie has one of the best moments in reminding people that it is about real people. when donald trump and carly fiorina were going back and forth. what strikes me though is that middle class, the words middle class were only used three times in that three hour debate. and yet defund and planned parenthood were used 28 times. that is where the emphasis was. and because of that i would say the person who was not on the stage who won was hillary clinton. although her biggest critic has been carly fiorina and she was strong last night. she was strong. great to see you guys. thanks so much for coming in. back to michaela in new york for a look at other stories. not just any stories, the five things you need to know. at number one, republicans are going after donald trump in their second debate as you have been seeing here an cnn. carly fiorina with a strong night in her first time on the main debate stage. concerning one million people evacuated after an 8.2 magnitude earthquake in chile. five killed. tsunami alerts in peru, hawaii, southern california and new zealand. some dramatic scenes unfolding at the hungary/serbia border. hungarian police firie ining tes at water at the desperate refug refugees. the u.n. calling this treatment unacceptable. the justice department is expected to announce a criminal settlement with gm today. faulty switches have led to at least a hundred deaths. we will have much more on the debate ahead here on new day. what did republican voters have to say about it all? we ll talk to them next. 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(vo) but you get to keep the memories. love. it s what makes a subaru, a subaru. the pundits have had their chance to chew through the cnn republican debate. we said it would change the race and certainly looks like it has. what do real voters say? jacob colup an undecided voter heading into the last night. you all saw the debate. you all saw the moments. do you still feel as resolute as you did going binto the debate? are you still all trumpfied? yes i would say i am. more or less? actually the same. e think he did a good job holding back and letting others take the stage and get things out. let s take a moment. everyone was watching what would happen when fiorina and trump encountered each other. they had many exchanges. they thought it was just going to be about her face. it was about so much more. including she went after him for his business management. and what she said were bankruptcies. watch this. you know there are a lot of us americans who believe that we are going to have trouble someday paying back the interest on our debt because politicians have run up mountains of debt using other people s money. that is in fact precisely the way you ran your casinos. you ran up mountains of debt as well as losses using other people s money. and you were forced to file for bankruptcy not once, not twice, four times. a record four times. why should we trust you to manage the finances of this nation any differently than you managed the finances of your casinos. what did you think about fiorina and trump s exchanges? i think carly took him down every time. there is no way trump is going to trump carly. i honestly believe that carly fights with the facts. carly fights with her opinions. and i think that mr. trump is very good at fighting with bully tactics. does she have high ground on business when hp, by many people s accounts road down the hill of success during her tenure? i think she does. and i think the reason that she does is that she had to make some tough choices. and when you are in a leadership position you have to make tough choices. and i honestly believe that carly is capable of doing that. she proved it with hp. she had to make choices that were difficult for the people who worked for her. but even members of the board of directors of hp have come out now and shown total support for carly. so definitely i think that she does hold the higher ground. i think it is night and day. i think when you look at trump you see a crony capitalist. he s used eminent domain to take land from people who needed it. t i think there are a ton of business examples and carly created jobs and safd a company. i think that is night and day. carly is an example of what we need. we need innovators and leaders. we don t need people like donald trump who are trying to sell political snake oil. when you went in you were preferring marco rubio. have you changed? i ve been talking a lot to gail. i haven t changed yet. but i think if carly or marco were able to get the nomination i would be fully in support of either would have been nose. political snake oil. that is what they are calling your man trump a salesman of. do you buy it? i do not buy it. i think the numbers speak. and the american people, the average american citizen want someone who is right out there with their opinions. and like it or not. he may have an odd way of presenting himself and a little bit brash. but he s speaking to the american people. what about all the times that carly went after him? who do you think won is this. i think carly held her own last night. she s an amazing woman. and i think he conceded. and i could tell on his face that he deferred when he said you re gorgeous or whatever his response to that was. she said the women across the country heard what he said about her face and then he said i think you re a beautiful woman. is that a little too late is this. oh yes. but what else could he do. did you believe it by the way. that he felt that way? i don t think he was even trying to attack her persona. i think that is just his strategy and what he does in business and he likes to knock people down. and if he knocks them down he wins. i don t think it is about her. he just picks something and goes for it. thanks for waking up early with us and giving us all your impression. thank you. and by waking up we mean never going to sleep, which we have not done. this was an important dabt. it changed the race and yet there is still more good stuff to tell you about today. and that s coming up next. devhighest quality,the clinically proven nutrition isn t easy, so at gnc, why do we do it? why do we include key ingredients found in fruits and vegetables to create the world s best multivitamin programs? why do we do over 150 quality checks before putting them on the shelf? well, here s why. celebrating 80 years of quality life and quality products. for a limited time buy one vitapak and get one half off. the worlds best multivitamin program, only at gnc. actually, knowing the kind of risk that you re comfortable so what abouwith,t stock? 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(vo) call 844-4-brightstar for your free home care planning guide. once there was a hushpuppy by dan romis man kind?eitlin are we good? go see. go look through their windows so you can understand their views. go find out just how kind the hes and shes of this mankind are. today s good stuff comes from alabama. rachel brimly was taking care of house work with her 4 month old strapped to her chest. an officer approached her home and she thought she was in trouble. apparently the officer spotted someone who needed a hand and did something. he mowed the lawn. her entire lawn. rachel posted this picture on facebook. her husband who apparently works away and long hours was really grateful. you kind of get the we re afraid to talk to cops mentality or fearful of them and it is good to just see them being human, you know. and cutting the lawn. how about that. great stuff. complements of alabama. that s great michaela. thanks so much for that and we ll look forward to seeing you back in new york tomorrow morning. it s been a very interesting 24 hours out here in the sim valley in the reagan library. right back to the newsroom with miss carol costello. newsroom starts now. this is about the character of our nation. you have to speak english. one thing i know for sure, he kept us safe. short, tall, fat, ugly. my goodness, that happened in junior high. they could care less about your careers. more energy tonight, i like that. good morning. doank you for joining me.

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Transcripts For CNNW Fareed Zakaria GPS 20160529



also facebook, pay-pal, linkedin, reed hoffman has been crucial in each. the ultimate entrepreneur and investor will tell me what the future of i just want to work here and start working my way up. finally, they are burning the barricades in france again. can you hear the people sing? well, surely you can hear them shout about what the french are being forced to do to actually improve their economy. but first, here s my take. donald trump s positions on public policy have shifted over the years, months even days, but on one issue, he has been utterly consistent. this country is utterly a hell hole, we re going down face. his message is to make america great again. in fact it is become clear that the united states in recent years has re-enforced its position as the leading technological and economic power. it has transformed itself into an energy superpower, while also moving to the cutting edge of the green technology revolution. and it is demographically vibrant, while all it s major economic periods, while japan, and even china face certain economic decline. the author of an intelligent new book the seventh sense argues that in an age of networks, the winner often takes all. he argues that there are nine global that are used by over 1 million people. all dominate their respective markets and all are american. in a pair of essays, china is the closest the united states has to a rising rival, but only on one measure, gdp, brooks and wohlford notice that half of china s exports are assembled there and mostly shipped out. take the most potent form of forced projection, aircraft carrier, the united states operates ten, china currently has one, a secondhand ukrainian ship that it had to retrofit. in the realm of high-tech perhaps most important, the united states has a web of allies around the world and is actually developing new ones like india and vietnam. meanwhile china has one military ally, north korea. the complexity of today s international system is that despite this american dominance, other countries have in fact gained ground. in 1990, china s share of gdp was 1.7%, now it s 15%. developing countries have gone from 20% of the global economy to 40% in the same period. while gdp is not everything, it is a reflection of the realty that no single country, not even the united states can impose its will on the rest. i tried to describe this emerging landscape in my 2008 book, in which i wrote, washington has no true rifle and will not for a very long time, but it faces a growing number of constraints, china has large and growing influence in the world, as can be seen by creating the asian infrastructure investment bank this past year over washington s objections. rising regional powers like saudi arabia and turkey, asse asserting their own power in the middle east. an ally and aid resip ynt quietlydefies the realty is that america remains the world s leading power, but it can only achieve it s objectives by defining it s efforts broadly and creating a network of cooperation. that does not fit on the campaign camp. for more go to c nrks nrnn.com/ and read my washington post column this week. let s get started. there is lots happening in the world today, we have got a great panel to talk about it m mar. he was a top state department official. and peter bynard is a cnn political commentator. brett, i want to talk to you about a rather controversial it shows an israeli soldier fatally shooting an already wounded palestinianman, suspected in a knife attack, the israelis say that found the wounded man posed no apparent threat when the shooting took place. what then happened was the series of political events that ended with the firing of the defense official and top military officials criticizing the government. the way it s been portrayed is that the military, the generals in israel feel that the government has become too kind of aggressive in it s willing to violate basic military protocol? judging from the video, it seems clear that the soldier who killed that palestinian assailant pretty much in cold blood, he faces charges of manslaughter and up to 20 years in prison. and if that proves to be the case, he should serve a very heavy sentence, that is one issue. and this issue was taken up by a number of politicians, including the new defense minister, saying hey, this palestinian was trying to kill one of our boys and essentially he deserves what he got. and the military is rightfully aghast at that point of view, it doesn t serve israel s interests in any way. but there s a secondary issue, which is the military s decision and of the former defense minister s decision to say to his officers, you guys can say what you want in public about the political statements and moves of your civilian masters and that seems to be a very separate issue. because in a democracy, a military staying away from politics, it s what obama asserted with mcchrystal and with douglas mccarthy. the behavior of this politician crosses a line where it threatens israeli democracy itself, right, peter? what s fascinating is that the most powerful opposition to benjamin netanyahu, is on the military establishment on iran and very strong statements of former leaders and heads of israeli s security service. what makes the problem complicated when you talk about the military s role in a democracy, is that for 49 years now israel has been holding a territory which is not a democracy, because the palestinians on the west bank cannot vote. he does not live in a democracy, and i think this is the sense of fear, the erosion, in a way it s almost on par to what you re seeing in the republican party. a conservative party that had a parliamentary individual rights tradition. people like lieberman represent the overlow of that with a kind of hyper nationalist thug authoritarian policy. that s all to one side. the basic issue is do the civilians control the military? whether you like the policies or views of those civilians. and that seems fundamental in any democracy. douglas mccarthy surely the civilian control has some limits. if the civilian government violates the constitution, basic human rights, takes the country to a place that essentially upends the constitutional order then the military has the right to stand up and say that, and from what i hear, not only the israeli and the ibf, saying wait a minute to the government, you are putting personal and political issues ahead of the national interests and ahead of the values on which israel was founded. i don t think any generals were fired in israel, but rather a politician that tried to arctic late the military s point of view was fired. the defense minister. and here with the issue of gays in the military, or other issues in the military, you don t have the secretary of defense getting fired for articulating the general s position. let me ask a question related to this. bernie sanders appears to have decided that he would like to amend the democratic military platform to change the language on israel. what s going on there? the democratic party since 2004 has said it supports the two state solution. but it only articulates the value of that in terms of israel s it does not in any of its platforms say anything about the fact that palestinians actually have rights and that is what bernie sanders representatives, the platform committee is going to want to talk about. if lieberman would like to get itself two state solution by redrawing the border and essentially kicking palestinian leaders out of the country. bernie sanders is actually the object political figure talking about this. it s a sign about how the democratic party is shifting. secretary clinton is clear about her support for israel s extraordinarily strong support for israel, but she s been very clear about the value of a two-state solution. and i think she would say it s in israel s interest because it is consistent with the country that israel was founded to be and israel s long-term stabltd and security. so i don t think she would have any problems talking about palestinian rights but that still is in israel s interest. when we come back, we re going to talk about the rest of the world. and i will ask brett stevens, the world stage editorial people who he s going to vote for in november. 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i mean it seems like you wouldn t kill people you thought you could negotiate with, so it seems we re in this unending military campaign. it s been some time since the war in afghanistan is going the way of iraq, it s not going smoothly and it may well collapse. there s a fear that we will have a mosul moment in afghanistan. tried to push very hard for reconciliation, reconciliation didn t happen. and i think there s an element of desperation here, because the administration essentially escalated the war with the taliban, and announced they re going to extend the war into pakistan proper with american military th military. if the military is willing to reengage in this war the way it reengaged in iraq. it was a very successful clinical strike. at the very least it seem s like it suggests negotiations are at a stand still and you re going to have to ramp up and you re ramping up in a situation where you ve also alienated pack stang. it s worth noticing when osama bin laden when the currently leader is assassinated, he s in pakistan. this was a very clear signal to pakistan, i think in many ways, independent of their actual goal of killing the ahead of the taliban, which is to say we are going after our enemies, the afghan government s enemies where they are, and you actually have to read this together with an extremely important announcement this week, between india and iran and afghanistan, to build up an iranian port, to provide that s essentially saying, look, to the pakistanis, you can cut a deal, there can be regional peace, or you re on one side and we re with india, iraq and afghanistan. it seems the iraqi government is now gearing up to try to take fallujah, maybe even take mosul, it s still not clear to me how that is going to work because somebody s going to have to govern that land. it seems like we re doing better militarily, the amount of territory isis controls is getting less. but you don t have a functional political contact to take advantage, even if you are to get military victories, isis, as horrible a situation is that is, you don t have legitimate leadership from the perspective of the sunnis and the united states probably doesn t have enough leverage over the iraqi government to force the iraqi government to do the things it needs to do to gain. the iraqis are under tremendous pressure from their base to essentially protect them and to punish them for the amount of suicide bombings that are happening in iraq. partly the problem is we look at iraq the way we want to look at it. the iraqis are not in this fight in order to put iraq back together. they re wanting to protect the shiias from what is an enormous isis onslaught. to put the pictures of the the saudi shiia cleric that was killed on all the missiles. the message is very clear, that this is a shiia-sunni fight, not about bringing iraq together. brett, i have to ask you, you have written eloquently against donald trump from the beginning, the rest of the establishment has collapsed and surrendered to his not particular warm embrace. are you going to vote for donald trump in the fall. i most certainly will not vote for donald trump. i will vote for the least left wing opponent to trump and i want to make a vote and make sure that he is the biggest loser in presidential history since i don t know, alf landon or going bag further. it s important that donald trump and what he represents, this kind of ethnic, quote, conte conservatism. the electorate cannot elect a man so unqualified to be president in any way, shape or form. so they have to learn the lesson perhaps the way mcgovern learned a lesson. why not guam, puerto rico and the district of columbia too. and will the wall street journal editorialize also? the wall street journal list has not endorsed a candidate since hoover. next on gps, if you thought segregation in america was a thing of the past, you would be dead wrong. i will give you the data when we come back. . now for a what in the world segment. a federal court ordered a mississippi school district to desegregate it s middle and high schools. no, this is not a headline from 1954. this rulingctually came down recently on the eve of the 62nd anniversary of brown versus board of education. that is the landmark case that deemed that racial segregation in public schools is unconstitutional. it has been six decades since the supreme court declared that separate education was inherently unequal. but amazingly, since the 1990s, a complicated tangle of laws, discriminatory practices, and democratic shifts have led to a very real resurgence in america. the number of so called apartheid schools across the nation, schools with 1% or fewer white students and found that these schools had more than doubled since the peak of interrogation in 1988. in 2011, there was 6,727 apa apartheid schools in the united states. a newly released government accountability office report confirms that in recent years american schools have become ever more segregated. in the 2000-2001 school year, 9% of k-12 public cools were mostly poor or minority. these students were offered less science, less math and less college prep than other schools. they were disproportionately more likely to be suspended or expell expelled. rutgers university professor says that between 2000 and 2013, the number of americans living in high poverty neighborhoods has nearly doubled from 7.2 million to 13.8 million. that income segregation looks a lot like racial segregation. he knows that nationwide, more than one in four poor blacks live in extreme poverty neighborhoods thcompared to 1 i 13 poor whites. in one illuminating study, attended court ordered desegregated schools between the 1960s and 80s. johnson found that blacks who attended desegregated elementary schools were more likely to graduate and 22% less likely to be incarcerated as adults. blacks who spent five years in public school saw her health improve. this group also earned on average 30% more annually than their cohorts that did not attend desegregated schools. johnson also found that the narrowing of the achievement gaps did not have any negative effects on whites on any metric. this all reminds me of something the great martin luther king jr. once said, it may be true that you cannot letting slate when you change the habits of men, pretty soon hearts of men will begin to change and attitudes will begin to change. up next on gps, billionaire reid hoffman, he s been visionary enough to get in on the ground floor of companies like facebook, and linkedin. over the world. cesl or that we searched billions of flights to get you here. a few weeks ago, you didn t even know where here was. now the only thing you don t know, is how you re gonna leave. expedia. technology that connects you to the people and places that matter. daddy doing work ,d it s funny that i ve been in the news for being a dad. windows 10 is great because i need to keep organized. school, grocery shopping. my face can unlock this computer. that s crazy. macbooks are not able to do that. hey cortana, remind me we have a play date tomorrow at noon i need that in my world. anything that makes my life easier, i m using. and windows is doing that. this clean was like - pow. everything well? it felt like i had just gone to the dentist. my teeth are glowing. they are so white. 6x cleaning , 6x whiteningá in the certain spots that i get very sensitive. .i really notice a difference. and at two weeks superior sensitivity relief to sensodyne i actually really like the two steps! step 1 cleans and relieves sensitivity, step 2 whitens. it s the whole package. no one s done this. crest - healthy, beautiful smiles for life. youthat s why you drink ensure. sidelined. with 9 grams of protein and 26 vitamins and minerals. for the strength and energy to get back to doing. .what you love. ensure. always be you. my next guest is the serial entrepreneur reed hoffman, if his name is unfamiliar to you, the companies he s been involved with certainly are not. he s best known as the co-founder of linkedin. he s also a member of the pay-pal mafia, the early employees of the payment site. and he invested early in facebook. hoffman also happens to be one of the most thoughtful and intelligent people i know in silicon valley. we met at his linkedin headquarters in silicon valley, california. what does the future of technology look to you. there s a thesis software eating the world. i think of it as transforming, rather than consumption, software is now becoming part of everything. and i think that changes the role in which bits shifted destinies of atoms. like to be very specific, you say, well, we re getting into personalized medicine, we actually have your genetic code. the bits of software is transforming the taxi industry by uber, so the bits are changing the atoms? i think that continues. i think the next part of it is, again people usually refer to it as the data, i think of it as human index data. that s when we can build new kinds of application based on the massive amount of data is available. if you re talking about traffic, how do i get here and how do i get around the traffic. but it s thought of navigation, you re and a half gaiting a career, you re navigating a personal life, you re navigating entertainment and all of that navigation, can turn into new kinds of navigation. the third one is that we re beginning to get some very interesting direct connections between software and data and biology. so the cost of sequencing the genome is coming down faster than moore s law. crisper, we are beginning to be able to rewrite the genetics in living organisms. for example if you have a specific genetic condition, that is just a few genes, you might actually save the child s life and have a feeling adult. like all technology, it s scary, but an amazing opportunity. one of the things you ve often talked about is that silicon valley and the united states has a unique advantage but not in startup culture, but what you call blitz scaling, not just having the idea, but actually being able to take it to a wide number of people. explain that. so if startups were the only thing, which is usually the story you get from silicon valley, it s no fear of failure technology, and taking risk. there would be companies all over the world. and yet when you look at the majority of the superinteresting tech companies that are all over the world, the majority are on the west coast and also in silicon valley. so why so many in an area with a total population of 8.5 million, 25 square miles, why facebook, linkedin, google, twitter, ebay, and the list goes on and on. what we have learned is not just startup, but also scaleup. and scaleup at speed. so i m borrowing blitz creed metaphor and it actually applies. the germans invented the changing warfare so you don t just advance to your supply chain, you carry enough munitions for one battle. so you either win or lose big. silicon valley has learned the same thing about scale kuwaup. we won t do any phone customer service, we ll do it all by e-mail. that s the equivalent, we ll leave the supply chain behind us and we ll run very far and very fast out and establish the market share and establish our businesses. the techniques are in hiring, the techniques are in management. the techniques are in customer support and we have kind of a living network of knowledge blased on the new techniques for that. and that s why silicon valley continues to use this massive technology. there s an appreciation of entrepreneur ship and risk everywhere. and yet the vast majority of the companies happen here. the venture capital firms are close buy, and stanford is close by. you re talking about a unique set of ideas almost. in particular, venture capital, capital is global. there s a lot of capital there. it s a great source of talent and creativity. but it s actually in fact the network of all the talent that comes here and learns how to do this. and when you look at that ecosystem, do you worry that that ecosystem can be easily replicated in terms of, after all the ideas, you re saying them now, you re writing a book about blitz scaling. why can t people just copy the idea? i would like there to be more silicon valley, any time a regional government comes to town you mean a foreign leader? we have had everything from french ministers, british ministers, a whole group saying what do we learn here and what do we do? i think the world is better off. it might make competition of silicon valley. but the network is kind of both cooperative and competitive at the same time. up next, how the ultimate linkedin guy reed hoffman networks himself and why this billionaire feels that he still needs to hustle. lessons or all of us when we return. to weather like this. .or this. .or even this? if a stain can survive any amount of torture. .is it still stain? arborcoat from benjamin moore. world saleilton is on honors members save up to 25% on brands like hampton, doubletree, hilton garden inn, and waldorf astoria so stop clicking around. book direct at hilton.com now that s satisfaction. sweet, sweet st. thomas nice. so nice, so nice st. croix full of pure vibes. so nice, so nice. this summer, experience us virgin islands nice. book 4 nights at visitusvi.com before july 16th to receive the fourth night free, plus 350 dollars in spending credits. r running non-stop. lifting up patients. .changing their socks. you re sore and you re beat from all that you did. for rest and relief try sealy s hybrid. so take a load off and feel good as new. cause sealy s support is perfect for you. only the sealy hybrid has posturepedic technology to support you where you need it most. sealy. proud supporter of you. .of fixodent plus adhesives. they help your denture hold strong more like natural teeth. and you can eat even tough food. fixodent. strong more like natural teeth. fixodent and forget it. and still haveealthy, gum disease. use gum® brand for healthy gums. soft-picks®. proxabrush® cleaners. flossers and dental floss. gum® brand. shoshow me more like this.e. show me previously watched. what s recommended for me. x1 makes it easy to find what you love. call or go online and switch to x1. only with xfinity. we re back now with more of my conversation with reed hoffman, co-founder of linkedin, early employee of pay-pal, early investor in facebook, that is a resume that has made him worth almost $3 billion according to forbes, but he didn t set out to be an entrepreneur. listen to his fascinating story. i heard that bill gate said somebody asked him why did you become an entrepreneur. he say i didn t set out to be an entrepreneur, i was fascinated with software. it s not like if i didn t have that passion and obsession, i would have started a restaurant business. i was not trying to be an entrepreneur. you were similarly motivated by the substance of it? that s funny, i haven t heard that directly from bill. the very very similarly, i only realized that the word entrepreneur applied to me when i was in the process of starting my second company, i was like, oh, right, they call people like me entrepreneurs, i think it s extremely important for society, it s how we adapt to the future, it s how we create pos perity, but for me it was i m trying to do this thing to help humanity involve in a good way and if you can change the medium by which we value each other. it s very easy to do reference checking, it s very easy to do okay, my dream is when people will start telling me i m reference checking prospective bosses before i go work for them and then i will know i provided a network age tool. one of the things that is clearly happening with technology and it s particularly happening as software begins to massively improve almost everything is that you re needing fewer people. what do you think is going to happen to people, the human talent, this is something you centrally deal with. i think it is beholden so the classic economist answer which you re very familiar with is, we create new instruments of productivity and then jobs shift and then new jobs are created. it happened in the industrial revolution so we anticipate it happening now. hopefully that s simply true. in the long run? in the long run. there are arguments that maybe it s not true this time. the scale and speed of both technology and globalization. exactly. and the pain of trance locution can be very serious. we as entrepreneurs, we as technologyists and we as influencers in our society, it should be all hands of deck, in that how do we create new businesses that create interesting jobs and one of the ways to look at this is not just as job creation, but also work creation, you may have a lot more entrepreneurial individuals who are enabling individuals to be small business and entrepreneurial. so actually allow a work creation that creates creative work. your last book was the startup. you always taught about the individual and how he can best navigate this world. what is your advice to someone who is listening to enhance their talents and opportunities? i was lucky to have gone to stanford, i wouldn t have thought of this whole path if i hadn t gone to stanford. is connect yourself to central nodes in the network. so say this is the direction i want to go, how do i meet some interesting people? if i look back on my career and say what do i wish i had done differently. i would have volunteered towork at netscape, it was one of the central internet company, i ll be a joanitor, i just want to work here and start working my way up here, because the center node of this new technology and the commercial system of the internet. so find your position in the network. how do you make sure that you get out there in a way that people see this? well, some of the stuff that i said in the start up review, is i present, one of the things i did when i was at apple, which was like my first real job, was i volunteered for work. i thought, oh, maybe i should be a user experience designer, i should be a product manager, that s a better fit for my skill set. so i walked over to the product manager group, i have a couple ideas of products we should be doing, i m going to write them up and all i want is some instructions, how would i learn it? and they re like oh, this bright kid as volunteered to give us some ideas. i will then go work on those idea ideas. internships are valuable in that context. you go to the smartest people you know and say who do i need to build a relationship with? part of building a relationship, you say, look, i m not just asking, i m building a relationship, i m trying to give as well. those are the kinds of things i think about. you still think about net working, about putting yourself in the middle of information flows, people, even though you re one of the best connected, most successful people in sop s silicon valley? that s the nature of the age. so you re still hustling? oh, yes. next on gps, the french are at the barricades again, protesting the unfairness of their working conditions. i ll explain the whole mess when we come back. (vo) on the trane test range, you learn what makes our heating and cooling systems so reliable. if there s a breaking point, we ll find it. it s hard to stop a trane. really hard. president obama visited vietnam this week and while he was there announced an end to the long standing american ban on arm sales to that country. the united states is fully lifting the ban on the sale of military equipment to vietnam that has been in place for some 50 years. it brings me to my question of the week, how much did trade increase between vietnam and the u.s. between 1995 and 2015? five fold? ten fold? 50 fold or 100 fold? stay tuned and we ll tell you the correct answer. this week s book of the week is actually a movie. hbo s all the way. this may be the best political drama i have ever seen on screen. it is certainly the best performance ever by an actor of a historical figure, brian cranston becomes president johnson. it s really about power, how to wield it, how to compromise, but above all, how to get stuff done. you re not running for office, you re running for your life. now for the last look. a fiery blaze, police uniforms, general chaos, looking at these pictures, you might think you re looking at a terror attack. but this is actually an angry clash between police and workers who are blockading an oil depot in france, strikes of refineries around the country have caused nation wise fuel shortages, france even had to dip into its oil reserves this week. one in three gas stations is short of or even out of fuel according to french media. and these are just the latest in a string of protests around the country. so why are the french so fueled with anger? union leaders are protesting a proposed labor law that allows companies to reduce overtime pay and increase overtime hours. and some employees will have to say goodbye to the 35-hour workweek. citizens feel betrayed president hollande s socialist government. many experts including the imf believe that these reforms are crucial, noting france s high unemployment rate of more than 10%, double the united states as well as it s huge public debt. they said the reforms will make hiring and firing easier in this country that is desperately in need of a diynamic labor market. hollande faces re-election next year so he can have time to push through these economic reforms, running out of gas literally. the question is d, bilateral trade between vietnam and the u.s. increased 100 fold between 1995 to 2015, from 4$451 millio to $598 billion. it increasing less than five times between the u.s. and mexico, from $108 billion to $5$5 $531 billion. we were surprised to learn that a cabinet reshuffle has made that position, well, a thing of the past. who could have predicted that? thanks to all of you for being part of my program this week, i will see you all next week. hey, good morning, it s time for reliable sources. today we look at the story behind the story, how news and pop culture get made. could the king of pop are be dethroned? could rush limbaugh s will respond to sanders claims of media bias. and the shocking twist in the hulk hogan gawker case. there s a billionaire that s been secretly supporting hogan the whole time. i ll tell you what it mean in the future of media.

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Politics Live

Childcare, there are those of women who want to train to be midwives but thatis who want to train to be midwives but that is all being cut away, and as a result and thank god they have come to help us, but actually you have got to have a plan to train up and support the workforce, and as i say, there are more people actually standing by helping hospital beds then there are immigrants lying in them so thank you to the immigrants for the nhs and let s train some more doctors ourselves. mar; for the nhs and let s train some more doctors ourselves.- more doctors ourselves. may i counter that? more doctors ourselves. may i counter that? we more doctors ourselves. may i counter that? we only - more doctors ourselves. may i counter that? we only have i more doctors ourselves. may i i counter that? we only have 123,000 doctors. counter that? we only have 123,000 doctors. 8800 counter that? we only have 123,000 doctors, 8800 gigabytess counter that? we only have 123,000 doctors, 8800 gigabytess are - counter that? we only have 123,000 doctors, 8800 gigabytess are goingl doctors, 8800 gigabytess are going to leave. doctors, 8800 gigabytess are going to leave. by doctors, 8800 gigabytess are going to leave, by 2030. doctors, 8800 gigabytess are going to leave, by 2030. now, doctors, 8800 gigabytess are going to leave, by 2030. now, the - doctors, 8800 gigabytess are going to leave, by 2030. now, the cap. doctors, 8800 gigabytess are goingi to leave, by 2030. now, the cap has been to leave, by 2030. now, the cap has been increased to leave, by 2030. now, the cap has been increased by to leave, by 2030. now, the cap has been increased by the to leave, by 2030. now, the cap has been increased by the government. i to leave, by 2030. now, the cap has. been increased by the government. we need to been increased by the government. we need to train been increased by the government. we need to train more been increased by the government. we need to train more of been increased by the government. we need to train more of our been increased by the government. we need to train more of our own - need to train more of our own people need to train more of our own eole. ., need to train more of our own teo tle, ., ., need to train more of our own eole. ., ., ., need to train more of our own neale, ., ., ., ., ~ m people. how long will that take? it is a contract. people. how long will that take? it is a contract, not people. how long will that take? it is a contract, not a people. how long will that take? it is a contract, not a manifesto i people. how long will that take? it is a contract, not a manifesto we l is a contract, not a manifesto we have. is a contract, not a manifesto we have. we is a contract, not a manifesto we have. we want is a contract, not a manifesto we have. we want to is a contract, not a manifesto we have, we want to take is a contract, not a manifesto we have, we want to take all- is a contract, not a manifesto we i have, we want to take all front line medical have, we want to take all front line medical staff. have, we want to take all front line medical staff, nursing have, we want to take all front line medical staff, nursing staff, - medical staff, nursing staff, doctors. medical staff, nursing staff, doctors, out medical staff, nursing staff, doctors, out of medical staff, nursing staff, doctors, out of the - medical staff, nursing staff, doctors, out of the basic- medical staff, nursing staff, i doctors, out of the basic rate of tax doctors, out of the basic rate of tax we doctors, out of the basic rate of tax. we believe doctors, out of the basic rate of tax. we believe that doctors, out of the basic rate of tax. we believe that as - doctors, out of the basic rate of tax. we believe that as a - doctors, out of the basic rate of tax. we believe that as a pay. doctors, out of the basic rate of i tax. we believe that as a pay rise of about tax. we believe that as a pay rise of about 6% tax. we believe that as a pay rise of about 6% overnight. tax. we believe that as a pay rise of about 6% overnight. i - tax. we believe that as a pay rise of about 6% overnight. i agree i tax. we believe that as a pay rise l of about 6% overnight. i agree with

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Burmese refugee giving back, offering Milwaukee residents critical support

Burmese refugee giving back, offering Milwaukee residents critical support
tmj4.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from tmj4.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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Fly Big Airlines all set to start Indore-Gondia-Hyd flight from Mar 13: CMD Sanjay Mandviya

Fly Big Airlines all set to start Indore-Gondia-Hyd flight from Mar 13: CMD Sanjay Mandviya : Rashtra News #Fly #Big #Airlines #set #start #IndoreGondiaHyd #flight #Mar #CMD #Sanjay #Mandviya Mandviya said that all the formalities have been completed and the company is all set to commence the operations from March 13. Fly Big Airlines is

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