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president donald trump as a it'll take for republicans to hold onto the house. >> and implement trump's agenda. if he wins in november and a heatwave, unlike anything americans have seen in decades, will send temperatures soaring for more than half the country. a reminder that when it comes to climate change, the worst is yet to come, unless something is done and is social media is dangerous as tobacco and alcohol, the surgeon general is now demanding congress take action and for social media companies to add a warning label for children were following these major developing stories and many more all coming in, right here to cnn news central right now a major strategy session going

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down in south florida, house speaker mike johnson is visiting former president donald trump, at his mar-a-lago resort, where the two republican leaders are hashing out their plans not only to win back the white house, but also hold onto the house of representatives this november, it comes just days chapter trump held meetings with republicans on capitol hill. >> the former president's first trip to the hills since the january 6 insurrection. cnn's alayna treene joins us now and elaina, this is a significant meeting for trump. and johnson. what are you hearing about it? >> well, that's right. well, when donald trump was in washington, dc last week, one of the promises he made need to lawmakers is not just to help the people in the room get re-elected this fall, but also many of the candidates that they're hoping we'll get elected and can help them expand their majority. remember, they have a very slim majority right now. it's very hard for mike johnson to get done a number of the priorities that republicans had hoped. they also don't have the senate. and so what donald trump wants out of this is he wants to make sure if he is

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elected in the fall, that he has the power within congress big enough majorities that they can help him implement that agenda. and also not push back on some of the big things that he's been planning and we've been hearing him talk about for the past year or so year or so now? now, the other thing i'm also told is after donald trump's conviction in the manhattan trial and 34 counts of falsifying business records days later, he called up mike johnson and he ranted to him about how he wants republicans in congress to do more to wage war on democrats. donald trump is still a very much caught up with this it's idea of retribution. it's something we heard some of his allies talk about this weekend in detroit at a conservative conference. and so that's the other part of this. it's very hard as well for mike johnson was such a slim majority to try and push back on democrats because he doesn't have that much power with such small numbers. and so a lot of this is planning out how donald trump can help then win in november. >> so obviously, the first presidential debate next week,

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right here on cnn, june 27th what are you hearing about what trump is planning on the schedule in the days leading up to the event, right. >> so tomorrow he has a rally in wisconsin, one of the states he's visited many times before. one of the key battlegrounds that he and his team think is absolutely necessary to winning in november later this week, he's traveling with j.d. vance, potential vp contender. they'll do a fundraiser in ohio. >> he also has a rally in philadelphia. >> this weekend, but luck when it comes to debate prep, when i taught his campaign, they repeatedly insist that he doesn't need to do debate prep, that he has no plans to do some of the mock debates that we know present it's an joe biden is engaged again, however he is still having these policy to discussions with his team gaming out how to respond to certain questions we know last week after he had met with house and senate republicans in washington, dc, he actually held a policy discussion meeting with senator marco rubio and senator eric schmitt. they talked about january six itself, thinking that that's probably something that will come up at the

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debate. and so they are of course, prepping even though they're trying to argue that he doesn't actually need it it's prep without the word prep attached to alayna treene. thank you so much. browner for the first time, a biden campaign ad is calling out former president trump is a convicted criminal, highlighting that a jury found him guilty on 34 felony counts last month. >> the biden campaign says voters in battleground states will be seeing this message starting today as part of a 50 $50,000,000 ad buy. here's a portion of the ad this election is between a convicted criminal who's only out for himself and a president who's fighting for your family let's talk about this now. a cnn chief national affairs correspondent, jeff zeleny. all right. and i should mention this cnn debate, which is going to be potentially critical, is ten days away. and perhaps this could preview something of it, but i wonder if you see this is a bit of a turning point for the biden campaign. >> without a doubt, i mean, they're investing 50 million

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this one ad, which is a lot of money even across seven battleground states and nationally in some respects, look, it shows that they are doubling down on this idea. we've heard president biden talk about it in fundraisers initially sort of tip toeing up to this point. but the bottom line is the biden campaign payne has struggled to break through this idea, sort of comparing the two and some call it trump amnesia that people have forgotten some of the exact things that trump did an office, some of the chaos. so they're trying to raise that point. but look, this has been the subject of much discussion among democrats, among operative it is an elected officials i've talked to. >> should they be spending so much time talking about donald trump, or should they be talking about the biden agenda, his accomplishments. >> we'll see, but they're making a very big decision here to try and use the summer months going into the debate to try and get people to focus on some of the negatives of trump

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and independent voters or who they're going after. because a lot of surveys after the trump trial showed that it barely moved the needle at all, except among independent voters, there was more of a concern. >> i think that's the real question. is this is the idea of does the character, character should matter? and traditionally, it has times, right? and it matters for us if we had to fill out a job application, this would be problematic for us if we have 34 felony convictions, we'd have to disclose that president obama was kinda lamenting this over the weekend. >> do you see this though, really motivating people? look certainly not trump's base and certainly not probably half of the country because a lot of this is baked in for trump. a lot of what's so interesting and unusual about this brand of both sides are using the exact same thing to make their arguments. the biden campaign is using the trump's conviction to make the argument that he is unacceptable. trump is using his own convictions to make the argument that he is the victim

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of this big persecution. so we will see which side wins, but on the margin, with independent voters perhaps it could move the needle somewhat likely not going to be a game changer though, because the election, after all, the economy is still listed as the number one issue in every survey, every voter conversation. so some people may just not be all that interested in this. >> i want to turn to a piece in the atlantic, which is looking at biden campaign officials and also democrats sort of party insiders close to the campaign, who had been taken their battles with the media, the press that normally they might reserve for more of a private venue. that this is kind of spilling out into the public and that it says these biden backers say that the media you're putting binds issues like questions about his acuity on the same level that trump wants to be a dictator when he takes office. a quote from the piece to candidates are not

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comparable, but they're being covered as if they were what do you think of this? >> sort of fad fight that we're seeing? >> look in every campaign that you and i have covered, the rules have changed a little bit. there's no doubt now in the era of donald trump, who is a mastermind in terms of using the media in some respects and promoting himself. the biden campaign is it's fighting back aggressively, more so than in any seven presidential campaigns i've covered, they are trying to game the refs here. they do it all the time, trying to point out that you're not being fair here so some of it is just the advent of social media. some of its it's in fighting just for the sake of sort of getting in people to think about the coverage little bit more. but the point is devotes care about this. my thought is no, the voters, i talk to and wisconsin and michigan and pennsylvania, other swing states and beyond. they don't necessarily are even online following how the

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candidates are being covered. so sure there can be disputes about how much time president biden gets on the air. are we covering trump too much? these things are always decisions every day. but the fighting that the biden campaign has been doing with the media, it's a bit unusual, but i don't know that voters care. yeah, it's a good board if they should care, they are living their lives get us a better economy, bring down inflation as opposed to tweeting out about something you said or i said on tv. >> yeah, maybe we care because obviously we're paying attention. >> it's a very interesting piece, hendrickson, a very smart writer at the atlantic, makes a very interesting set of facts he points, out yeah i thought it was a really interesting piece to read for even for people who may not be interested in this debate, i think they'll like the piece, jeff. thank you so much. appreciate it. bores a dangerous heat wave not seen in decades is scorching more than half the us population and over the next week, cities across the midwest and northeast are going to continue baking in

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record-breaking temperatures oversees the unforgiving heat is claimed even more lives, at least 14 jordanian citizens died during the hajj pilgrimage to mecca. >> as temperatures topped 115 degrees across the region. cnn chief climate correspondent bill, we're is in new york covering this for us where the temperature is also steadily climbing bill, these heat waves are also leading to deadly consequences across the world absolutely across the world here in the united states, as we look at this heat dome, as it settles in around the country, 260 million americans will have temperatures over 90 degrees. >> it is the silent killer heat. it preys on older folks, usually an older structures. so now's the time to check on folks from ohio domain way up in the northeast, not used to these temperatures. you're going to taste it right now. but as you mentioned, boris oversees the hajj were literally hundreds of thousands of people are packed together. they're in mecca, they reach temperatures near hundred and 25 degrees. it was deadly. of

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course, we expect hot temperatures like that and saudi arabia in places like the greek islands where, where people are missing, they're not used to it up in in concord, new hampshire and places up in the northeast, there won't get temperatures near that. what they're seeing in mecca right now. but again, a symptom of an overheat and planet these days, voice and bill, i think i know the answer to this, but i imagine that this is just going to continue to get worse absolutely. >> this is the result of sort of planet cooking pollution in the air ban 425 parts per million right now, way too much for the goldilocks planet. we grew up on. we've got this godzilla made the carbon. he gets bigger by about 40 billion tons a year and a lot more that happens. the more we're going to feel it here on earth. the good news is it seems like humanity is about to hit the peak of fossil fuel consumption maybe this year, it only went up about 1% last year electrification is kicking in. the big story is how fast and how much life can be saved

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between now and then. >> a godzilla made of carbon that is definitely a good way to look at it. bill, we're thanks so much for the update you still to come. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu disbanding his war cabinet after his main political opponent quits the latest on the political turmoil over the war in gaza meantime, the idf announcing a so-called tactical pause to allow aid into the region. but that doesn't mean a pause in fighting. we're going to explain and what unicef is now saying about the dire humanitarian crisis the way and later, maryland's governor just handed down a mass pardon for marijuana convictions. we're going to speak to the state's attorney general about that. you're watching cnn news central i voted buttons like dragging my rainbow kid. >> it's like your generation has evolved past traditional political symbols. and there's room for everyone. >> yeah ukraine those white

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neutrogena, ultra shear sunscreen is still on the clock. >> vital sun protection goes six layers deep, blocking 97% of burning uv rays. it's light, but it's working hard. >> like me neutrogena, ultra shear sunscreen. >> manu raju on capitol hill. >> this is sienna israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu making major changes in his country's fight against hamas. >> today, he disbanded his workout in israel's war cabinet, which was established right? after the october 7 attacks, netanyahu's decision happening just days after the idf announced daily tactical pauses in gaza. and ever that they see is to provide a safe route for humanitarian aid through the kerem shalom crossing. cnn's oren liebermann is joining us now from haifa, israel in the north or in what is netanyahu's motive? if behind dissolving the war cabinet house is expected to impact things

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briana, as with so many other things in israel, there is some politics behind this. >> first on the functionality of the war cabinet when former war cabinet minister benny guns resigned just a few days ago, it effectively made the war cabinet unnecessary. and that's because the only other two members with authority there were the prime minister himself, benjamin netanyahu, and his defense minister, yoav galant. they are from the same party, so they can work together that didn't need a war cabinet to do so, nor did they need any sort of unity government format to be able to make agreements on how to manage which the war. the other part of this is that one of netanyahu's far-right ministers, itamar ben gvir, had demanded to become a part of the war cabinet, and he has made extremist demands on how to run the war in gaza, saying gaza should be resettled by jewish settlements, urging the use of more force in gaza and in lebanon and more of these demands. one of netanyahu's ways of simply avoiding the demand to join the war cabinet was to not have a war cabinet. and so it was disbanded

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according to an israeli official, the war itself will now be managed in the security cabinet, which already exists as part of every government israeli official said netanyahu would conduct consultations, but it's not clear exactly with who netanyahu has been in charge of israel for years and knows how to manage the security cabinet. it puts him firmly back in the driver's seat, but briana, that comes with its own challenge and that's that the blame will be more squarely on him because there is no other party helping him to manage the war and frankly manage the country. it's also worth pointing out that the us envoy for israel and lebanon held meetings with not only netanyahu, but others senior israeli leaders to try to avoid or head off a large-scale confrontation between israel and hezbollah, as we have seen, more hostility on israel's northern border. >> now we're keeping a close eye on that oren liebermann. thank you so much for the report from haifa boris, for more on the aid crisis in gaza. let's bring in unicef spokesperson ricardo perez. ricardo, thanks so much for being with us when it comes to

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these tactical pauses are you seeing a difference in the amount of aid that's actually getting into gaza? >> thanks for having me bar is no for the time being, actually, we're not it's important for us to reinforce that even though any decision to drop last bombs and have less violence on the ground effected killing, injury children on a daily basis across the gaza strip is welcomed by unicef we need to be very aware that there's no evidence yet that these processes work. and from what we're hearing on hearing on the ground, nothing has really changed, so we're welcoming it. it's a small step, but it's certainly won't be the full solution to the problem, which is what we really need to address right now while these pauses are taking place, the idf has vowed that fighting generally will not stop have you been given assurances about the safety of unicef and other aid workers in those areas no,

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absolutely not. what we see actually, it's more and more fear spreading across the drug of gaza strip because for over eight months now, children, families have been displayed so, display so many times. and across the north to the south and are all into small areas of land. now, in al-mawasi that abella or the remains of khan younis in the so-called humanitarian zones where conditions are not, your main at all. i would say that they're actually quite inhumane because there is not enough food reaching them, not enough water, not enough medicines. field hospitals or not being able to cope with the demands there are very few centers that can actually treat, for example, malnutrition. so again, it's a small step towards hopefully better days with the this tactical pause. but what we're seeing on the ground, the evidence is not showing that it's having the impact that it should considering the amount of time that these people have been suffering have you been

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given any indication how long we should anticipate that this daily pause will last no. >> we don't have any indication of that bore isn't it? it's a good question. i think first, we need to make sure that it starts it starts well and it holds to all with its promises and that more aid is facilitated. but again, it's not only about managing to move a from the eight through different or this one deconflicted corridor. it's so about distributing aid on the ground once it hits and reaches warehouses, been able to pick up this a pickup medicines, malnutrition, treatment, water, food and delivering it to the points where the need is very huge and more that we need more deconfliction. we need more corridors cleared and we need more tactical posits so spread across. so the humanitarian work six workers can do their work safely so your answer kind of echoes something that we heard from the idf, but but i think you don't necessarily

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mean the same thing. >> there was a spokesperson for the idf who told cnn that they believed that there was enough food getting to gaza, but they argue that the problem was with distribution yu-shun. i'm wondering what you think of that. what your responses while the pregnancy is indeed with distribution because eight is getting through even though it's not enough and trucks are getting less across the board. now that didn't have that, they haven't previous months, so we're not getting enough, but once we get them min, the safety of those operations to do distributed the logistics, the lack of fuel for trucks to pick up, that eight that just crossed and go to areas where communities are still waiting for that aid, but are not getting it with enough consistency. so no. the problem is indeed of safety on the ground for humanitarian workers to operate. and quantity. and none of those two factors are being fully met at the moment

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so on the question of this humanitarian aid pier, us officials temporarily shut it down. >> they wanted to avoid any potential damage from high seas. do you have any clarity on how long it's going to be out of service no. >> i don't and i think that's actually a good example, boris, of how some of these all steps that were very welcomed at the time and for all of us hoping that this nightmare will end at some point soon, that that was a good movement towards more aid getting in and more eight getting distributed. and we didn't see that. we saw a very small cooperation with some participation from the un, unicef, but are our colleagues from wfp but then after they picked up those supplies and took them to warehouses we saw some of them being looted because there was not enough safety and the desperation on the ground is so is so high. so i think that's a good example of how we need to do a lot more than tactical bosses and peers

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of the shore to really tackle the issue of hunger spreading across the strip of children getting killed hold on a daily basis of not being protected have been traumatized, of having lost their parents, their families, their homes, and now still not seeing a ceasefire, which is what we're really talking about. we need a ceasefire that's the only only element that can really make a change to this horror right now ricardo perez we have to leave the company i'm recession there. >> we appreciate you joining us thank you. of course. >> russian president vladimir putin is set for a rare visit to north korea. we're going to get you a live report from moscow now on this, just ahead also, why the surgeon general believes that social media should come with a warning label for kids, will discuss and just moments wednesday cnn celebrated juneteenth with special performances by john legend, hadi lewbel smoky robbing we still have a lot of work to do juneteenth

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with the aura ring this is no secret, war. secrets and spies. sunday at ten on cnn the us surgeon general is calling on congress to put a warning label on social media apps similar to the labels that you see on tobacco products. and his op-ed for the new york times, vivek murthy calls the mental health crisis among young people an emergency, and his sights, social media as a major contributor murthy pointed to a study that showed teens who spend three hours a day on social media double their risk of depression and anxiety symptoms. >> but according to a recent gallup poll, teens spend nearly five hours a day on those apps speaking to nbc this morning,

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murthy said warning labels would help remind parents and teens that social media has there's not been proven safe not only have companies not demonstrated that their platforms are safe for kids, but there's growing evidence of harm that's deeply concerning to me, not just a surgeon general, but as a parent myself, no. >> a warning label would help parents to understand these risks many parents don't know that those risks exist and joining us now is trialed safety advocate and the founder and ceo of common sense media. >> jim stier. jim great to have you on this. i think so many parents wonder about this. what kind of impact do you think a warning label would have? >> i think it will have a huge impact. and kudos to dr. murthy for having the courage to come out and say this is absolutely right that we have a major youth mental health crisis in this country. social media is clearly a huge contributing factor to that. and calling for a warning label is a major step forward. let's talk about what

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might get in the way of that effort. namely congress, you need congressional approval to implement that surgeon general's warning label. and congress, as we've discussed before, they've failed to really take any meaningful steps to regulate social media companies why do you think that is an and do you think they might sign off on this warning great question boris. >> and first of all, yes, congress has been totally missing an action for 20 years on social media shame on them for that. but the bottom line is, this is a really good idea for society, for parents, for young people. and the truth as a warning label, be very effective. congress just has to pass legislation. so maybe they can actually stand up and do their job for once on this. and the truth is, it will help parents understand the potential negative impacts you gave the statistics briana earlier, about five hours a day for kids who are really dealing with social, emotional and cognitive issues because of social media. so a warning label helps the average parent

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understand this is like tobacco. you really have to be worried about this. remember, there are no seat belts for social media that you can just click on your kit. so they're being exposed to all sorts of challenging mental health issues because of their social media experiences. so a warning label from the surgeon general is a great idea. congress has to do its job though boris and pass a law for this. >> how do you think the social media companies would respond to this? >> they're not going to like it. riana. but the truth is what have they done? again, we work with all of them were the biggest group in the country on these issues. and we work with them some are more responsive than others. i actually think that they're not going to like it because it will remind people that their products can be addictive and that those platforms can have a negative impact on on young people's sense of self and self-esteem, but also anxiety and depression, things like that. they're not going to like it. and obviously they spend hundreds of millions of

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dollars. lobbying gets legislation. one thing that i think it's important for your viewers. remember is that major legislation does get passed here in california where i'm right now and work out for comment tents media is based also when europe. so i actually do believe that legislation, regulation will happen even if congress doesn't act, which it's failed to do for nearly 20 years. the state levels will happen. we just passed a big bill in new york last week about social media. and i also think you'll see it elsewhere. so there is a movement here that even though the social media company is made out like it, they instagram's, et cetera. may not like this kind of legislation parents want it. we want it and it's plain common sense let's say it doesn't happen at least at a national level it's now been, as you pointed out, essentially, your generation of people that have been around social media and obviously young kids that are very eager to use it five hours a day is kind of a crazy statistic what

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happens if we don't have these guardrails for kids? and another generation passes having social media the way that it is now for it, such a great question. >> first of all, parents can do a lot in terms of just talking with our kids, were big believers. your common sense. we have 1.3 million future members. most of the schools in the states use our digital literacy curriculum. i would show you schools can educate people and they could basically say to kids, we should be telling every kid that there's a warning label. this is like tobacco. they need to be aware of it. but the other thing i think that we can see states like california and new york combat, take the lead, so we'll be introducing legislation probably in congress cfl affirm this warning label idea that the surgeon general's recommended, but we'll also introduce legislation in california, new york, and so once you start to see that snowball happening at the state level, then we can have real progress for the kids and families who end this country who deserve that kind of guardrails that you're referring to.

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>> or let's talk about some guard rails because the surgeon general is pointing out the warning label it's not enough to fix the problem. he's also urging, of course, parental involvement, creating phone-free environments, restricting kids social media until they graduate from middle school what would you say to parents whose kids? our in that five-hour range, it kind of a young age who are attached to social media already, how do you change that relationship ron, a great question. >> first of all, i'm the parent of four kids, myself, who probably wouldn't agree with everything their dad says about social media, but actually, the older they've gotten them where they do agree with eight i think what you say to parents is you can really enforce rules and that you have to even if the social media companies themselves are pushing this through algorithms on your kids 24/7. you need to, as you just mentioned, and as the surgeon general has said, you have to have device free zones we run a bit the campaign called device free dinner at common sense. so you have to

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remind your kids not to sleep with their cell phones. and i actually think waiting and delaying giving your kid a phone is great practice. we did that in the stier family. our kids didn't love it, but it turned out to be a really good move and i would recommend that parents do that schools talk constantly to the students themselves and also to parents bodies at their schools about the risk associated with social media look our kids loved platforms like instagram and tiktok and youtube, and they're going to be on that. but the more they're educated about the downsides, the better and young people are smart we have a hundreds of millions of users and they talk a lot about how much social media has a negative influence on their lives. so kids are smart teenagers are smart. so we just have to keep reinforcing to them common sense, balanced use of social media. put your phone away basic stuff that is part of parenting in this new digital age. if we do that,

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then we're going to go along. will be a long way down the road and i'm a warning label, just be a really good added back. >> all right. we're out of time, but just right quick, what was the age that you restricted them until? >> we didn't give him a phone job. i finished eighth grade and we were very clear with them about, by the way, now they're grateful for that. and briana, i would tell you that i think the other thing is is talking to your kids about what they're experiencing on social media because there's a lot of positive stuff that you can experience. yeah, but there's so many negatives to be continued. these are it's a really important moke move moment. i think for our country, when the surgeon general has the courage to come out and say something like that. >> yeah. we'll keep talking about this. it's essential. a gym. great to have you. thank you so much. >> thank you briana boris so noon today, maryland's governor just pardoned more than 175,000 marijuana convictions. what is behind the mass clemency next?

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captioning brought to you by gilt visit, gilt.com today for up to 70% off designer brands house the designers like your heart racing, had inside a prices you every day, curry, they'll be gone in a flash. designer sales that up to 70% shop guilty.com today and historic move today's today, maryland's democratic governor pardoning more than 175,000 marijuana convictions and his state, the mass clemency forgives low-level misdemeanor cannabis possession charges for about 100,000 people in maryland to move that comes more than two years after the state approved legalizing recreational marijuana for people 21 and older and if you look at the past, you see how policies have been intentionally deployed to hold back entire communities we're talking about tools that have led to the mass incarceration of black men and boys were talking about tools that have

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led to restricted access to jobs and housing in minority communities. we're talking about tools that have led to an 8-to-1 racial wealth gap in our state and let's talk about this more now with maryland's attorney general anthony brown. sir. thank you so much for being with us. we heard a little bit there from the governor, but just tell us a bit about what the effect of these convictions has been on the daily lives of so many people job briana, thanks for having me on, you know, when i speak with people who are impacted that have had conviction for low level cannabis crimes of the difficulties they have when they apply for a job the difficulties they have when they apply for housing, the difficulties they have when they apply for certain educational opportunity. >> so it's been a real barrier for some and i know it's hard to understand that for people who don't have records, but speak with and spend time with someone who does and you'll

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understand that a conviction and a conviction for low level drug, a crime like possession of a small amount of marijuana has been a showstopper for so many people in so many ways and what about the timing of this? >> can you tell us about the connection to juneteenth? >> well, it certainly symbolic. i mean, juneteenth where we acknowledge the freedom of all black americans after the civil war, it came late to african americans in texas and some can say that this pardon, while governor more certainly acted in a very unprecedented and expeditious way it's been late and calming for america and for african americans so we're excited, we're going to celebrate june. juneteenth on wednesday and today we celebrate the pardon of 175,000 convictions in maryland right now, there are 24 states and also dc, which have legalized marijuana for adult

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recreational use. 38 states allow medical use, but of course, marijuana is still federally illegal. what problems do you encounter when you have this patchwork of laws? >> charlie, haven't spent time in congress. i appreciate the value of congress acting so that we have one sort of standard across the country when it comes to decriminalizing and allowing for the adult lawful use of cannabis. but this is what we've done in maryland as a result, we're able to pardon convictions today as a result, we're able to create opportunities as the cannabis industry takes off and to ensure that communities that were negatively impacted during the war on drugs. while now benefit from the lawful use of cannabis. and then we can take those state revenues and vast communities that were so hard hit during the war on drugs. so this is a hopeful day in maryland. we have challenges with the federal government not

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acting to take a cannabis or off the schedule, or certainly schedule one. but notwithstanding that, maryland and other states continue to move forward we see this movement, right? to forgive convictions like this, or to reclassify these drugs in many cases, in many states it doesn't mean and federally, but it doesn't mean any changes when it comes to policy for troops and veterans, you're a veteran. governor moore is also an arm let me combat veteran. there's a large military presence in your state. does this need to change i think it does. >> i mean, certainly you point out an important area in the military. certainly no one would expect a soldier to be intoxicated or under the influence of alcohol or drugs while they're forming their duties. but that a soldier would be discharged for the lawful use of cannabis in maryland, i think is

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hypocritical. the same can be said for a commercial truck driver who could lose their license because in maryland, they now can lawfully use or consume so in cannabis. but their license would be taken away from this. >> so all of this just cries out for help, for relief for action at the federal level to ensure that we've got a consistent standard, we recognize that cannabis can be regulated much like alcohol and tobacco is throughout this country. >> and the congress needs to act. >> attorney general anthony brown will have to see if they do here in the coming years. a lot of people focused on this issue. thanks for being with us thanks, brianna and tonight on the source, maryland governor wes moore will be joining kaitlan collins that will air at 9:00 p.m. eastern right here on cnn and we'll be right back i was stuck unresolved depression symptoms were in my

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it's a trip that's raising international concerns. russian president vladimir putin is heading to north korea on tuesday for a two-day visit. a country that putin has been visited and more than two decades and it's coming at a key moment for north korean president kim jong own, who hasn't hosted and other world leaders since the covid pandemic. let's turn live now to cnn's matthew chance, who's in moscow for us, matthew, what else are you learning about this trip? >> while you write boris, it's coming at a crucial time because russia is continuing to press. its conflict in eastern ukraine. and it's been dependent on ammunition supplies from north korean factories to keep up. its rate of fire. it's shooting about 10,000 it's and artillery rounds every day. it can't keep up with production with its own factories. so it's having to talk to you, having to depend on north korea to send it millions of rounds according to

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us officials to help it support that rate of fire something by the way, that the, both the russians and the north koreans deny. but many of the other guy of months include the united states and the south koreans, other us allies feel that this is what is actually happening from the north korean point of view. well, obviously they need food and energy. it's an impoverished country and russia can supply that but the big concern is that russia may also supply ballistic missile technology even nuclear technology, to that threatening korean peninsula state, something the kremlin says, it won't do and hasn't even been asked to do. but again, that is the concern as this relationship between president putin of russia and kim jong-un of north korea seems to get ever closer with this two day trip, which is planned for later this week, boris, we will be watching closely as i'm sure many other leaders around the world will and beijing and here in the united states, matthew chance live for, is for moscow. thank you so much so, speaker

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mike johnson is spending part of his house recess in florida meeting with donald trump as republican primaries are heating up another hour of cnn news central starts after this quick break so i hear some of you are concerned about the fact that i'm taking over the company will rest assured companies in great hands marcy hit the holmes.com. >> we we've done on your homework now, that is worth celebrating i. love it. >> thank you home work very clever, very clever holmes.com we don't comes bad debt holding me back only

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they don't have to be go to facet.com to get your free score today. >> the leaf with jake tapper to today had four on cnn closed captioning is brought to you by sokoloff law mesothelial victims call now $30 billion in trust money has been set aside. >> you may be entitled to a portion of that money. all we 8085920400. that' with idential here on cnn, joe biden is hitting donald trump hard, criminal and a new ad while trump is plotting his path forward meeting with house speaker mike johnson to see what they can do to hold the house. >> and they use that power if trump wins back the white house and with summer is still three da a

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