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“It feels like the economy is gagging on the uncertainty." That's what Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics, told CNN's Kate Bolduan earlier this week, referring to not just tariffs but taxes, immigration and federal budget cuts. And we're about to get a brand new read on the US economy: who's hiring and who's firing in the first full month of President Trump's second term. Also on today's show: Trump cast doubt on the NATO alliance. Could the US abandon some of its closest allies? And California's Democratic governor breaks with his party on transgender athletes. Is this a preview of the divisions ahead in 2028 and later? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Kate Bolduan of CNN could not recall the Biden staffer who was all over the news when he stole multiple women's luggage. Visit the Howie Carr Radio Network website to access columns, podcasts, and other exclusive content.
Anderson Cooper and his colleagues at CNN...are attempting to convince their audience that Elon Musk is untrustworthy. During a segment on Elon Musk Tuesday night...Anderson Cooper lost control and used an expletive while referring to the former governor of New Hampshire. We reveal and react to this CNN segment with Anderson Cooper. We also react to a CNN segment...between Scott Jennings and Kate Bolduan. We explain why the media agenda is clear with Elon Musk...and why CNN is desperately trying to demonize Donald Trump. SUBSCRIBE TO BEHIND THE LINE - SHORTS: https://www.youtube.com/@btlshorts-84
Dave Rubin of “The Rubin Report” talks about Elon Musk's vicious comeback to Gavin Newsom for making it illegal to post an AI-generated parody Kamala Harris campaign ad; “The View's” Sunny Hostin and Joy Behar appear to blame Donald Trump's rhetoric for the second assassination attempt while being oblivious to their own; White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre gets angry at Fox News' Peter Doocy for pointing out the dangerous rhetoric that Joe Biden continues to use about Donald Trump despite a second attempt on his life; Byron Donalds calling out CNN's Kate Bolduan for refusing to admit that Kamala Harris continued to push disproven hoaxes about Trump's “bloodbath” and “very fine people” comments; Benny Johnson trying to find out Kamala Harris supporters' favorite policies; Camille Paglia shocking Charlie Rose with her brutal takedown of multiculturalism; Florida putting an 11-year-old boy through a perp walk for his threats to commit a mass shooting; and much more. WATCH the MEMBER-EXCLUSIVE segment of the show here: https://rubinreport.locals.com/ Check out the NEW RUBIN REPORT MERCH here: https://daverubin.store/ ---------- Today's Sponsors: Gravity Defyer - Sick of knee pain? Get Gravity Defyer shoes. Minimize the shock waves that normal shoes absorb through your feet, knees and hips with every step. Use the promo code "RUBIN30" at checkout, to get an extra $30 off orders over $130 or more. Go to: http://gdefy.com and Use the promo code "RUBIN30" Home Title Lock - Ensure that your home title is safe from thieves. Sign up today and you'll get your first 30 days of triple lock protection for FREE – AND a complete title scan of your home's title. Go to: https://www.hometitlelock.com and USE promo code DAVE Lumen.Me - Lumen is the world's first handheld metabolic coach that measures your metabolism through your breath. It lets you know if you're burning fat or carbs, and gives you tailored guidance to improve your nutrition, workouts, and sleep. Go to: https://lumen.me/rubin to get 15% OFF! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dave Rubin of “The Rubin Report” talks about Bret Weinstein shocking Joe Rogan with his dark prediction for the 2024 election; Bret Weinstein telling “Valuetainment's” Patrick Bet-David why the Democratic Party is now a major threat to democracy; Donald Trump telling Shawn Ryan about his private talks with Elon Musk and what position he could hold in his Cabinet; CNN's David Chalian showing host Kate Bolduan how current polling in important swing states is showing which groups of voters could tip the election in favor of Republicans; MSNBC's Morgan Radford not getting the answer she expected from a biracial voter whom she expected to be excited by Kamala Harris; Vivek Ramaswamy unloading on CNN's Kate Bolduan for ignoring the flip-flopping of Kamala Harris; Joe Rogan and Bret Weinstein thinking that a recent New York Times headline could have been from the Babylon Bee; and much more. WATCH the MEMBER-EXCLUSIVE segment of the show here: https://rubinreport.locals.com/ Check out the NEW RUBIN REPORT MERCH here: https://daverubin.store/ ---------- Today's Sponsors: Contagion Emergency Kit - This prescription Contagion Emergency Kit from The Wellness Company provides you with a carefully selected assortment of effective medications for bird flu, COVID-19, and other respiratory illnesses. Rubin Report viewers save $45 at checkout PLUS free shipping when they use code: RUBIN. Kits are ONLY AVAILABLE IN THE USA. Go to: https://TWC.health/RUBIN and use CODE: RUBIN PrizePicks - Play PrizePicks alongside Druski, Joe Budden and MMA Champ Suga Sean O'Malley? PrizePicks puts their members first, so all withdrawals are fast, safe and secure. Download the PrizePicks app today and use code RUBIN and get $50 instantly when you play $5! 1775 Coffee - Stop drinking bad coffee and drink coffee that embodies that revolutionary spirit. Rubin Report viewers get 40% off their first subscription order. Go to: https://1775coffee.com/RUBIN and use code RUBIN Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dave Rubin of “The Rubin Report” talks to cohost Dr. Phil McGraw about the most recent Joe Biden gaffes and his concerning signs of cognitive decline; an MSNBC host getting confused and frustrated by a new Washington Post poll that shows that swing state voters overwhelmingly view Trump as better suited to handle threats to democracy; NBC News' Julia Ainsley reporting that the border crisis has taken a dangerous turn as the FBI announced that 400 ISIS-linked migrants have crossed into the country illegally and 50 of them can't be located; Alejandro Mayorkas stuttering to answer CNN's Kate Bolduan's question about why voters overwhelmingly think Trump is better suited to handle the border; the special green-light mics that CNN had designed for the first presidential debate, which seem to be made to make it easier for Biden not to get confused; his predictions for the first 2024 presidential debate between Joe Biden and Donald Trump; and much more. WATCH the MEMBER-EXCLUSIVE segment of the show here: https://rubinreport.locals.com/ Check out the NEW RUBIN REPORT MERCH here: https://daverubin.store/ ---------- Today's Sponsors: Gameday - Stop suffering from daily pain! Use the 100% drug free way to get full body pain relief without dangerous pills with Conolidine. Click on the link below TODAY you can access the only Conolidine product in the world for less than $1 per day. This private link will work until midnight tonight. Go to http://www.trycono.com/Rubin Ground News - We all know how manipulative mainstream media can be - often only showing us one side of the story. Ground News will show you every side. Rubin Report viewers get 40% off. Go to https://Ground.News/RubinReport Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Delaware's Democratic Senator Chris Coons voiced a perspective on Wednesday, suggesting that actions that diminish the possibility of the nation's erstwhile Commander-in-Chief, Donald Trump, regaining his office might be an encouraging sign for Americans. A somewhat contentious decision, with a slender 4-3 majority, was handed down by the Colorado Supreme Court late Tuesday. This decision was based on their interpretation of the 14th Amendment, raising concerns and provoking outcry in several sections of the community. While discussing this topic with Kate Bolduan during a segment on 'CNN News Central', Senator Coons reminded viewers of the court proceedings in Colorado. The hearing revolved around unveiling evidence that points to Trump's involvement in actions that disrupted the law and order of the nation. A somewhat cryptic process, but it did indicate the former President's engagement with the chaotic episode. The grave implications of the actions on that unforgettably turbulent day in January last year linger in Coons's mind too. The Senator was present in the Capitol during the appalling events of January 6th and experienced first hand the enraged mob. This gives him a unique perspective, having literally been at the heart of the storm, which shaped his beliefs about the day's events. In fact, the deeply concerning events of that day led to the impeachment trial of the former President, an extraordinary time in US history. The conclusion Coons has drawn from these events seems indisputable in his view - the evidence includes the previous President in the actions that led to the breach of the Capitol. And this, he believes, should be ample reason to disqualify Trump from future federal office.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Dave Rubin of “The Rubin Report” talks to Robert Barnes and Viva Frei about the most recent escalation in the war between Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg; if Instagram's Threads is in fact a “Twitter killer”; Elon Musk's just announced lawsuit against Meta for stealing from Twitter; Elie Honig telling CNN why the courts shouldn't be interfering with Joe Biden's social media censorship by preventing communication between the Biden administration and Big Tech; MSNBC's Andrea Mitchell and CNN's Kate Bolduan having a good laugh about cocaine being found in the White House just after a Hunter Biden visit; and much more. WATCH the MEMBER-EXCLUSIVE segment of the show here: https://rubinreport.locals.com/ Check out the NEW RUBIN REPORT MERCH here: https://daverubin.store/ ---------- Today's Sponsors: Moink - Join the Moink movement today! Get grass-fed and grass-finished beef and lamb, pastured pork and chicken, and wild-caught Alaskan salmon, direct to your door. Rubin Report listeners and for a limited time viewers get FREE ground beef for a YEAR. Go to https://www.moinkbox.com/RUBIN
Mediaite editor Aidan McLaughlin speaks with CNN anchor John Berman, who was recently named one of the anchors on "CNN News Central" — a new three hour program on the network — alongside Sara Sidner and Kate Bolduan. McLaughlin and Berman discuss the new show, changes at CNN, the network's town hall with Trump, how to cover the former president, reporting on war zones in Iraq and Ukraine, and much more.
Mediaite editor Aidan McLaughlin speaks with CNN anchor Kate Bolduan, host of 11 a.m. show "At This Hour." They discuss her extraordinary career and her 15 years at CNN. Bolduan joined the network at 24, and within five years she was named the co-host of "New Day" — making her the youngest morning show host on television. In the years since she has interviewed presidents and reported from war zones. McLaughlin and Bolduan talk about her career and the radical changes happening within CNN.
[As always, this little blog/newsletter is how I pay my bills, and I would be so grateful if you support my writing with a paid subscription.]Four months is a long time these days. At least for me, it used to be that four months was a bit of a jog but easily contextualized in the brain's aerial view. I could look backwards and easily spot that marker. Now, it seems, the space-time continuum has been cruelly mocked and warped by current events in such a way that a month in 2022 honestly feels legitimately equal to a quarter in 2011 and looking backward that far, even that much, is a fool's errand, only bound to disappoint.Whatever you were doing four months ago, the world continues to indifferently spin into spun-up difference from what it once was. Four months ago was before 19 children and two teachers were murdered in Uvalde, TX. Four months ago was before a white supremacist murdered ten innocents, targeting the Black community in Buffalo, NY. Four months ago was before—wait, be honest with me: without looking it up, how easily can you recall the details of that horrific mass shooting on the New York City Subway in April?That wasn't even four months ago.Exactly four months ago yesterday, I was at SXSW watching the world premiere of “Gabby Giffords Won't Back Down”, a documentary about the former Arizona congresswoman who survived a brutal assassination attempt in 2011 that left six others murdered and has since been on a journey of remarkable advocacy, both in her medical rehabilitation after being shot in the head at point-blank range and the widely-praised leadership role she has undertaken in the gun reform movement. The documentary is superb, and we'll get to that in a second. I want to further underline that four months ago was a completely different world, especially for the families in Highland Park and Tulsa and Uvalde and Buffalo and Pittsburgh and Sacramento and I wouldn't blame you at all for missing details on a few of these. In America in 2022, it's hard for even the most news-centric among us to keep up with the mass shootings that make national news, let alone the unending cascade of underreported mass shootings that tear through communities across the country.Since March 12th, 2022—the date of the world premiere at SXSW—there have been 250 mass shootings, according to The Gun Violence Archive.In other words, there has been an average of more than two mass shootings per day since Gabby Giffords premiered her deeply moving and galvanizing documentary in Austin. More than twice daily has there been a mass shooting in the United States over the past four months. More than twice daily. Think about that.This past Monday, July 11th, was a good day for America but particularly meaningful for Gabby Giffords and every other survivor and advocate in the gun reform movement. Just before noon, President Biden presided over a ceremony on the White House South Lawn to celebrate the signing of the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, the first gun reform legislation signed into law in three decades.Brilliantly shepherded through the notoriously inept upper chamber by Senator Chris Murphy (D-CT), the law does a hell of a lot more than we've seen in recent memory and yet has also drawn criticism for falling well short of what our lawmakers should be doing to curb gun violence in America.That's an observation which, forgive me, seems pretty goddamn redundant. Of course it doesn't do enough. No bill short of taking every single common sense measure would be enough in this crisis. Universal background checks are common sense. Registration of every firearm is common sense. Proper licensing for every gun owner is common sense. Banning civilian ownership of assault weapons is common sense. The absence of any of these in a bill would make the legislation inherently flawed, even if they were the sole absence. That must be the good faith reading of any rational adult in government.But our government is not flush to the gills with rational adults, and so, the most rational adults must not let the perfect be the enemy of the good. Let me state resolutely: this new law is substantial progress and deserves celebration, and I personally don't need more than a moment's thought to understand that many thousands of lives will be saved because of it. That is worth celebrating.Of course it's not enough. Why would it ever be enough? Eighteen years from now, thousands of children will have just graduated from high school who would have otherwise been brutally murdered in a mass shooting or by an abusive relative or by themselves with an unsecured firearm in their home after being purchased by a domestic abuser.I was there on Monday with hundreds of other attendees. I saw Manuel Oliver stand up in the middle of the President's remarks, not far in front of me, and let the world know this isn't enough. That's true. It's not enough. He has every right to be angry at the pace of all this. The man lost his child. That is a pain I can't begin to fathom. I also saw numerous advocates carrying full-size photographs of their slain loved ones, far too many of those being a child's school portrait, coming up to President Biden and other elected officials to thank them for taking a few steps forward, saving a few more thousand lives, giving a few more million people a bit more hope for the future.It seemed like just about every single gun reform advocate in the country was at this ceremony and almost all were willing to express two thoughts simultaneously: that this bill is a good thing, won through dogged advocacy, and it's also not nearly enough.This new legislation wouldn't have been possible without countless advocates doing the labor for so many years, and even so, Gabby Giffords' story is one of those that stands out among that extraordinary crowd. A few hours after the ceremony, many of us made our way downtown to the U.S. Navy Memorial Plaza for the D.C. premiere of her documentary.Four months is a long time, as we've now established, and I could feel the difference between the screenings. I didn't feel as depressed or worn out in Austin. Maybe it was the lack of national reporting on mass shootings in the first quarter of this year, but the whole situation seemed to significantly lessen in its incessant horror for a bit, certainly nothing like the gauntlet of terror to which we've all been witness since April.And yet, there was hope. Had we not all just been at the White House to observe some significant steps forward? The documentary seemed to match this balanced tone of grounded optimism and brutal honesty perfectly, beat for beat. The filmmakers, Julie Cohen and Betsy West, previously won widespread critical claim for their documentaries on the late Justice Ginsburg (2018), Pauli Murray (2021), and Julia Child (2021), public figures navigating the exceedingly thorny intersection of power, influence, and gender.“Gabby Giffords Won't Back Down” is firmly within that tradition of excellence while also capturing a potent urgency that confronts the violent uncertainty of this hellish era in which we live. For a long time, there has existed a muted paranoia throughout the nation, a feeling that any of us could be next in a mass shooting. But the decline of our institutions and a corresponding decline of faith in our institutions and the ripped stitches of January 6th, raw and festering and wholly unclean, have added an additional and formidable layer of desperation to our national mood. How the hell are we gonna fix this when the tools required to fix it need fixing themselves?The documentary doesn't blow smoke but it also refuses to back down from the claim that we can get through this together, if only we had the faith in each other to do so. Gabby Giffords and Mark Kelly have that kind of faith in each other, and it shows.So… the story.It was 2006, and Gabrielle Dee Giffords, a 36 year-old former CEO of her grandfather's local tire company, had seemingly come out of nowhere to win a congressional seat covering an area the GOP had held for more than 20 years. She had sold the business in 2000, did two years in the state house, two years in the state senate, and then launched a long shot bid to win in a district where the Republican incumbent had trounced both of the Democratic challengers in the two previous election cycles by more than 24 points. Well, the GOP incumbent, Jim Kolbe, decided not to run for reelection and the more moderate GOP candidate most likely to succeed him was plunged into scandal and GOP voters chose a far more conservative successor and Democrats nationwide had one hell of a year in effective political messaging (on their way to taking back the House), and suddenly, this seat seemed very much up for grabs.But that all still fails to account for the magnitude of the pendulum rebound that occurred in Arizona's 8th congressional district that year. Giffords didn't win a nail-biter. She didn't simply take the edge in a photo finish.She won by more than 12 points, a swing of 36 points among voters from Republican to Democrat in only two years. It wasn't just that she won in a landslide but that she did so in a district that was overwhelmingly Republican-supporting.And she did this while being unapologetically pro-choice, supporting a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants, and refusing to agree that marriage should be restricted to one man and one woman (remember: this is 2006).How?The documentary highlights Giffords' extraordinary interpersonal intelligence, at once empathetic and authentic and confident and completely disarming to even some of her most conservative constituents who didn't support her, a dynamic on the recipient that's described by admirers as being “gabbyfied”. That's not an exaggeration. Go look up interviews that Giffords did before the shooting. She sounds like a real person. She sounds like the most evolved form of a kind and well informed neighbor who truly wants to make the world a better place. I have been a student of politics for a long time and I've heard countless anecdotes about Clinton and Biden and a handful of others making someone in a crowded room briefly feel like they're the only person in the world. But even that effect carries something of a conceit that we all seem to accept: this is their job and they're the best in the country at it and the Greats are meant to suspend reality for a few moments. It's almost like a magic trick and we understand it's not real and the vast majority of us are okay with that.The thing about Gabby Giffords, what seems abundantly clear, is that she never needed the benefit of reality being suspended in order to reach someone. It wasn't magic. It was just her. The opening scenes of the documentary point to Giffords' most likely trajectory back in the early aughts: a handful of terms in the House, then probably some time in the Senate, and down the road, it is implied (and quite rightly), a truly competitive candidacy for the White House from a notable swing state, probably sooner rather than later.It was the first week of January in 2011 when Giffords and her advisors had made plans to huddle in D.C. and start prepping for a likely run against then-Sen. Jeff Flake in 2012. (By the way, can you imagine that race? She would have cleaned his clock.)Before they could do that, there was a constituent event to attend, “Congress on Your Corner”, a feature of her district outreach that had become a high priority for Giffords. It was supposed to be 90 minutes of greeting folks and talking out their concerns in front of the Safeway in La Toscana Village. Just past 10am, as Giffords and her staff engaged with constituents, a coward whom I refuse to name, armed with a Glock 19 pistol and several magazines he had purchased at a sporting goods store just a 12 minute drive away, walked up to the Congresswoman, shot her in the head at point blank range, and then began firing at everyone else. Gabriel Zimmerman, 30, Gifford's community outreach director; Dorwan Stoddard, 76, retired construction worker; Phyllis Schneck, 79, homemaker; John Roll, 63, Chief Judge of the U.S. District Court for Arizona; Dorothy “Dot” Morris, 76, retired secretary; and nine year-old Christina-Taylor Green, who was getting interested in civics and wanted to meet the Congresswoman.Six deaths, 14 injured, including Giffords, in less than 60 seconds of shooting. Daniel Hernández, Jr., an intern in her office, had the wherewithal to slow Giffords' bleeding and ensure she didn't choke on her own blood, long enough for paramedics to arrive five minutes after the shooting started. This would save her life at a critical moment.Gabby Giffords was pronounced dead to most of the country for at least an hour that Saturday afternoon. NPR ran with what they thought was a critical scoop, based on two unconfirmed sources, and the rest of national media did the bulk of the work in pushing it out. At one point, every major network was reporting that Giffords had been assassinated. By the way, as much as I love NPR and certainly support their journalism, the close of their explanation and apology over this incident, more than a decade ago, is ludicrous: “While NPR made a significant mistake that dinged its credibility, it should be commended for quickly apologizing and being transparent. Rather than hurting NPR's credibility, taking responsibility for the mistake should enhance it.”What?Mark Kelly, Gifford's husband, a seasoned NASA astronaut who was then prepping for an upcoming shuttle mission, listened to a news broadcast informing him that his wife had been murdered and broke down.As much as this documentary is about gun reform and Giffords' journey of recovery and her love story with Kelly, that particular scene over NPR's callous approach at the time, the normalized rush for media to be first rather than be right, is especially potent. The problem with clumsy media going for clicks and listeners rather than accuracy is one that very much persists to this day.Did I mention that Giffords and her family have a hell of a sense of humor? I certainly didn't expect to laugh as much as I did while watching a documentary on an assassination attempt. Throughout her recovery, Giffords, even through the dense fog of recalibrating her brain, sparks scenes with her wit and warmth. Her chemistry with Kelly—it almost feels underwhelming to describe it that way—is the engine of the movie. During the Q&A after the D.C. screening, CNN's Kate Bolduan asked Giffords and filmmakers Cohen and West about the undeniable theme of a “feminist marriage” between them — a true partnership between Giffords and Kelly that tracks a balanced but nuanced inverse of their public roles before and after the shooting.Giffords eventually returned to the House in the midst of her recovery for critical votes but declined to run again, the health complications being too much to surmount at the time. Kelly, having completed his fourth shuttle mission, retired from NASA, pissed as could be about the lackluster response from Congress following the attempted assassination on his wife and gun violence generally, particularly in the wake of Sandy Hook, and launched a bid for John McCain's old seat in the Senate.Kelly, whom the documentary lovingly describes as far more of an engineer than a politician, is guided through his campaign by Giffords. One notable and hilarious scene shows Giffords tutoring Kelly on the maiden speech he's scheduled to deliver following his victory against Martha McSally. “Slow down, head up”, Giffords playfully urges Kelly, who demonstrates an impressive adaptation to a skill set he's never needed.For his part, Kelly's predominant role is caregiver, tending to Giffords throughout her recovery process, keeping the family steady and optimistic, doing the emotional labor typically expected of women, and, all the while, continuing his demanding work as a literal NASA astronaut.Cohen and West depict an ideal marriage of equals, simply two human beings who love each other and bring out the best qualities in one another's hearts during the worst of times.Their relationships, with each other and their kids and their close circle of friends and family, emphasize the importance of community.I met Gabby Giffords in Austin after that screening back in March and couldn't help but get a picture with her after the D.C. screening on Tuesday. She didn't know me from Jane, just another admirer in the crowd, and yet, she took the time in both moments to thank me for attending, gave me a big hug, and said some encouraging words. I was most certainly gabbyfied.Four months is a long time these days, and the world is already very, very different from March, as it will be in November, four months from now. The speed of change has become so quick, seemingly everything in flux, that we are forced, for our own sense of stability, to grab things that are steady and hold on for dear life.It is in uncertain times that leaders who can offer us a sense of certainty shine the brightest. The Gabby Giffords who was once discussed as a likely future presidential candidate more than a decade ago is the same Gabby Giffords who received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor, last week.Folks will point to her example of recovery and resilience or the work that's been done by her organization, eponymously named “Giffords”, to educate the public on gun violence and push for common sense reform, or her general leadership in the public arena, which is more respected and influential than ever.With humility, I would offer that none of these are the greatest achievements of Gabby Giffords. Her greatest achievement is reminding us all of the importance of community in an era through which our country has never demonstrated a greater need for it. Four months is a long time and the world is changing quick on its own axis but Gabby Giffords, more than a decade on, even in her most vulnerable moments, hasn't changed much at all. She's always been right there, in the community, doing the work. If leadership means empathetic continuity, she's among the greatest to ever take that walk.God bless her for it.—[“Gabby Giffords Won't Back Down” enters nationwide release in theaters this Friday, July 15th. View the trailer here. Take my word and go see it. Find showtimes here.]Charlotte's Web Thoughts is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Hi, I'm Charlotte Clymer, and this is Charlotte's Web Thoughts, my Substack. It's completely free to access and read, but if you feel so moved to support my writing, please consider upgrading to a paid subscription: just $7/month or save money with the $70/annual sub. You can also go way above and beyond by becoming a Founding Member at $210. Get full access to Charlotte's Web Thoughts at charlotteclymer.substack.com/subscribe
There is no new episode of the Inside Politics showcast today. At This Hour with Kate Bolduan is covering for John King. To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
There is no new episode of the Inside Politics showcast today. At This Hour with Kate Bolduan is covering for John King. To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
There is no new episode of the Inside Politics showcast today. At This Hour with Kate Bolduan is covering for John King. To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
There is no new episode of the Inside Politics showcast today. At This Hour with Kate Bolduan is covering for John King. To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
There is no new episode of the Inside Politics showcast today. At This Hour with Kate Bolduan is covering for John King. To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
There is no new episode of the Inside Politics showcast today. Kate Bolduan is covering for John King. To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
There is no new episode of the Inside Politics showcast today. Kate Bolduan is covering for John King. To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
There is no new episode of the Inside Politics showcast today. Kate Bolduan is covering for John King. To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
There is no new episode of the Inside Politics showcast today. Kate Bolduan is covering for John King. To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
There is no new episode of the Inside Politics showcast today. Kate Bolduan is covering for John King. To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
President Trump issues 26 new pardons, including ones for longtime ally Roger Stone, former campaign chairman Paul Manafort and White House senior adviser Jared Kushner's father, Charles. CNN’s Kate Bolduan discusses President Trump’s threat to derail the coronavirus relief bill passed by Congress. "What I've experienced over the last six weeks has been a complete upheaval of my life," says Dominion Voting Systems executive Eric Coomer on being the subject of conspiracy theory election accusations. "I have been in hiding...I have not been able to return to my normal life."To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
With the virus raging all over the Midwest, Trump and Biden hold late rallies in battleground states. At a rally, Trump makes new claim that doctors are getting paid more money if someone dies from coronavirus. While campaigning in Minnesota, Biden claims Trump has "simply given up" on COVID. Needing to fortify his Rust Belt coalition, Trump adds a fourth rally in Pennsylvania on Saturday. Meanwhile, Biden and Harris make plans to campaign across the state on Monday. As Trump's support among older voters continues hemorrhaging, Kate Bolduan sits down with senior citizen voters to discuss their reasons for abandoning the Republican candidate. To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
In the final episode of The Forecast Fest, we discuss how the coronavirus took over the Democratic primary. Then, we explain Biden's inevitable path to the nomination.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, we break down the new two-man race: Biden vs. Sanders. Then, we discuss the impact of Warren and Bloomberg's exits from the race.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, we break down the tenth Democratic debate and the Nevada Caucuses' results. Then, we preview the next primaries in South Carolina and the Super Tuesday states.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, we recap the fiery ninth Democratic debate. Then, we dig into the Nevada landscape leading up to the caucus this weekend. Plus, we discuss Bernie Sanders' frontrunner status.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, we deep-dive into the results from the New Hampshire primary. Then, as the campaigns go west, we get Harry's Forecast for Nevada. Plus, we discuss Mike Bloomberg's rise in recent polls, along with the renewed scrutiny from his time as New York City mayor.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, we break down Iowa's vote-reporting debacle. Then, we look ahead to this week's Democratic debate and get the Forecast from Harry for the New Hampshire primary.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, as the Iowa caucuses loom, we break down a flurry of new polls. Plus, we discuss why it's difficult to predict who will win in Iowa, and which candidates have an advantage going into the caucuses.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, as the historic impeachment trial gets underway in the Senate, we look at polling of how Americans are reacting and compare those numbers to 1999. Then, we take a closer look at what impeachment may mean for swing-state Republicans. Plus, Harry argues that folks may be underestimating Bernie Sanders' chances at winning the Democratic nomination.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, we break down the winners and losers of the final Democratic primary debate before the Iowa caucuses. Plus, we deep-dive into two new polls out of the Hawkeye State. Then, we discuss what Cory Booker's exit might reveal about Democratic voters' priorities.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
In our first episode of 2020, we preview the seventh Democratic primary debate. Plus, we discuss the role endorsements and fundraising play in predicting the ultimate primary winner, and how the developing situation in Iran might influence the 2020 race.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, Kate, Harry and John take a break from the face-offs in Washington and on the campaign trail, to battle it out amongst themselves! It's an end-of-the-year showdown of electoral, presidential, and impeachment trivia.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, we preview the final Democratic primary debate of 2019, and discuss how the DNC debate qualifications may be affecting the field.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, we dive into two new national polls, to see who's gaining momentum, who's losing support, and who's holding steady. In light of this week's unveiling of two articles of impeachment against President Trump, we look at how American's views on impeaching and removing the President have (or haven't) changed over time. Then, we look ahead and parse some early polling in a few states that stand to be influential on Super Tuesday. And finally, we discuss which primary candidates Latino voters are leaning towards.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, we play out a few scenarios of how the Democratic primary might unfold in the early states. Then we discuss what the departures of Harris and Bullock could mean for the 2020 race and the party. Finally, we break down a poll that looks at how President Trump ranks against previous Republican presidents.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
John and Harry recap the latest debate, and discuss new Wisconsin polling on impeachment.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
Kate and Harry preview this week's Democratic primary debate.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, we discuss Michael Bloomberg's possible entrance into the 2020 race, the momentum behind Pete Buttigieg's boost in Iowa, and how the televised impeachment hearings may influence voters.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
On this bonus episode, Harry and John discuss Michael Bloomberg's chances for a successful 2020 presidential bid, and what his entrance into the race could mean for the rest of the field.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, we discuss head-to-head match-ups between President Trump and top Democratic candidates in key swing states. Then we dissect Sen. Elizabeth Warren's Medicare-for-all plan, and the polling around Medicare-for-all. Finally, we look at new caucus polling out of Iowa and Nevada, and examine a few results from Election Day 2019 to see what they might tell us about 2020.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, we discuss the latest New Hampshire poll that has Joe Biden coming in 3rd place. Then we discuss the overall health of the Biden campaign, amid reports it may be struggling. And finally, we look at a few key elections taking place Tuesday on the state level in Kentucky, Mississippi and Virginia.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, we look at where the Democrats rank in Iowa with about 100 days to go until the caucuses. Then we dive into a new CNN poll, and break down where the country stands on Syria, impeachment and the 2020 election. Finally, we discuss why top Republicans are beginning to push back against President Trump's agenda.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
This week, we recap the latest CNN/NYT Democratic primary debate, discuss if Ohio is still a bellwether state, and take a look at the LGBTQ community's growing influence within the American electorate.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, we preview the upcoming Democratic primary debate in Ohio, as well as the gubernatorial election in Louisiana. Then we talk impeachment efforts of yore, and Sen. Mitt Romney's role in the current impeachment inquiry against President Trump.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, we focus on how the impeachment inquiry could impact the 2020 race. Then we discuss why new South Carolina and Nevada polls are telling a slightly different story than the national numbers about the state of the race. And finally, with the close of Q3, we look at which campaigns are making money moves.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, we look at Senator Elizabeth Warren's rise in the polls. Then we discuss the politics and the polling around two topics at the forefront of the news: impeachment and climate change.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, we look at new polling out in the wake of last week's presidential debate, and dissect President Trump's approval numbers. Then we discuss a surprise endorsement in the Democratic primary contest, and explore how a resurgence in calls for impeachment might affect the 2020 election.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy
The Forecast Fest with Harry Enten, Kate Bolduan and John Avlon
This week, we bring you an early preview of the Democratic presidential debate coming up on Thursday, and talk about the latest updates in the GOP primary race.To learn more about how CNN protects listener privacy, visit cnn.com/privacy