congress and in moments he will sign it into law. this as vaccines are being delivered to americans with the goal of having enough vaccines for all adults by the end of may. nearly 1500 americans are still dying on average each day to a disease that didn't have a name just 15 months ago. i'm going to turn now to chief cnn white house correspondent kaitlan collins. kaitlan, before you get into the details of the president's speech tonight, tell us what you know about this signing event. >> reporter: well, so this was a bit of a change. we were not expecting president biden to actually sign this bill until tomorrow when they were going to have a signing ceremony at the white house with all the lawmakers. but now the president says they got this bill last night earlier than going through those procedural motions up on capitol hill, so he wants to sign this as quickly as possible so it can go into effect. you'll see this in about 30 minutes or so. we're going into the oval office and see president biden sign this legislation, see if he makes any comments on what is really a defining moment of his 50 days in office, his first major piece of legislation. of course, this is all setting the stage for that prime time address that is coming in just a few hours, his first prime time address since actually taking office. what you're noting there, just think of everything that happened a year ago when we were told that biden tonight is really going to try to mark those moments, mark what americans have been through for the last year, really they've been through hell for the last year. but also what the white house wants him to do is look ahead and what that return to normalcy is going to look like as vaccinations and the vaccine supply is starting to get ramped up and life could potentially return to normal if you listen to health experts and what that's going to look like. what will be the question for him tonight is striking that balance between the fact that this crisis is still very much going on. 1500 americans are still dying per day from this, but he wants to recognize that there is coronavirus fatigue. so that will be the messaging challenge facing president biden later tonight. we're expecting that speech to run for about 20 minutes. it's going to be from the east room of the white house, so that will really be what they say is the next chapter in the federal government's response to this pandemic. >> all right, kaitlan collins at the white house, thank you so much. a president's first prime time address is noteworthy and the topics over the years say a lot about the times and society. we looked at them in every form, from oval office speeches to news conferences. >> good evening. tomorrow will be two weeks since i became president. one of our most urgent projects is to develop a national energy policy. >> good evening. i'm speaking to you tonight to give you a report on the state of our nation's economy. i regret to say that we're in the worst economic mess since the great depression. we have to face the truth and then go to work to turn things around, and make no mistake about it, we can turn them around. >> mr. speaker, mr. president, distinguished members of the house and senate, tonight i'm back to offer you my plans as well. the hand remains extended, the sleeves are rolled up, america is waiting and now we must produce. together we can build a better america. >> on wednesday evening i'll address the congress about the specifics of my plan, but first i turn to you for your strength and support to enlist you in the cause of changing our course. >> good evening. the research in deriving stem cells from human embryos is a national debate and dinner table discussions. i'm a strong supporter in science and technology and believe they have the potential for incredible things. i also believe human life is a sacred gift from our creator. i worry about a culture that devalues life. >> good evening, everybody. i'd like to speak distinctly about the state of our economy and why i believe we need to put this recovery plan in motion as soon as possible. that is why the single most important part of this economic recovery and reinvestment plan is the fact that it will save or create up to 4 million jobs. because that's what america needs most right now. that's the test facing the united states of america in this winter of our hardship. >> today i'm keeping another promise to the american people by nominating judge n neil gorsh to be in the united states supreme court. >> the stem cell address certainly stands out in the history books. it's also worth noting that many of those addresses focused on the economy which will be a big focus tonight as well. prince william is the first family member to publicly comment on the accusations in that oprah winfrey interview. his grandmother issued a statement, and the next day william was asked by a reporter if he thought his family was racist. this was his response. >> reporter: have you spoken to your brother since the interview? >> not yet but i certainly will. >> reporter: is your family racist, sir? >> we're certainly not racist. >> she penned the op-ed how two women broke down whatever fantasies remained about the british monarchy. prince william denies having a racist family. i wonder what you thought of his reaction there, and maybe, i don't know, some of the context when it comes to the monarchy about what may be missed in what was obviously a very quick response to a question. >> sure. i don't know anybody who would respond to the question of, is your family racist, saying, yeah, i think so. we shouldn't be shocked. what we need to consider is the royal family as being not just a family, but an institution, right? for a long time, for decades, you heard of the royal family being called "the firm," and we have to remember this is an institution in britain with so much reach around the world due to, honestly, colonialism and racism, and that legacy there. but this is an institution that has hundreds of employees, has an entire machinery to support their activities. so when you look at it that way, and when you look at how there has been a global reckoning of powerful institutions and specifically white institutions, and i think we can very safely say that the british monarchy has been a white institution interested in protecting, you know, itself as it is, which is being white, that in that case, then yes, there are clearly serious reasons to say that as an institution, it has clearly not been friendly to people of color. and, again, anybody can just read history and infer that perhaps the british monarchy is not the poster child for uplifting people of color around the world. >> i wonder, why do you think there's so much interest? it seems like americans who generally have no interest in the royals, and certainly there is an american involved in this here, but why do you think there is so much interest in this moment involving the royal family? >> i actually think that prince harry said it very well during the interview that both the royal family, again, as an institution, and meghan markle and harry, it's not so much about them, but it's about what they represent about where we are on race relations. again, remember how meghan markle's engagement and then subsequent marriage into the royal family, there were op-eds and commentary penned about how this was going to modernize them, how this was going to bring them into the 21st century, right? so i think the reason why this moment is so emotionally packed for so many people here in america is that we are also having our reckonings with institutions, especially black women, who find ourselves in institutions that do not support us, do not protect us, even driving us to places where our mental health is compromised, where our children aren't safe. i think that's why it had so much weight, it's because of what meghan and the royal family represent about our struggles to basically survive in white-dominated systems and institutions. >> it's certainly clear it's become about something so much bigger in a conversation that is underway. karen, if you can stay with me, i do want to change topics real quick. the senator of north carolina is hitting back at joy reid who basically said he was being used as a problem for the republican party because he's black. here's how the senator responded in an appearance of fox news with host trey gowdy. >> black supremacy is as bad as white supremacy. we need to take that seriously. for those that say it's common sense, matthew 4 is still to be read. >> let's read that. but i say unto you, love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you. >> the bible may not be his thing, but what he's perhaps trying to articulate and, you know, trying to dance in front of his base for is this year of, again, more and more black people, people of color, people who have formally been marginalized now entering mainstream conversations about our experiences, about white supremacy, about privilege, about anti-blackness and these conversations are gaining more and more strength and more and more power, and honestly, i would prefer a world where, you know, knowledge and awareness and sensitivity did rein supreme and not old institutions and practices that managed to suppress not only black people but our entire democracy, right? so, you know, i would just say nice try, senator scott, but i ain't buying it. >> you are not buying it. karen attiah, thank you for being with us. >> thanks, brianna. in an extraordinary moment, all former presidents except for one urge amed americans to get vaccine. see what happened. a veteran charged in the capitol attack. a veteran that had top security clearance when he moved in the presidential marine one squadron. a new tape emerges of donald trump urging another georgia state 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[ deep inhale ] claritin-d. get more airflow. there he is. remember when you recommended that i go with the general for my auto insurance, so i moved your desk into this janitor's closet? turns out, you were right about the general. they're actually a quality insurance company. so, i'm giving you the primo desk. for a great low rate, and nearly 60 years of quality coverage, go with the general. we have breaking news. president biden will sign the $1.9 trillion covid relief stimulus bill into law moments d that means those $1400 stimulus checks could be on the way to americans soon. every former president, except for one, are banding together to urge americans to get covid-19 vaccinations. >> we've lost enough people, and we've suffered enough damage. >> in order to get rid of this pandemic, it's important for our fellow citizens to get vaccinated. >> i'm getting vaccinated because we want this pandemic to end as soon as possible. >> so we urge you to get vaccinated when it's available to you. >> so roll up your sleeve and do your part. >> this is our shot. now it's up to you. >> notably missing from the psa is former president donald trump and his wife melania. the only living ex-president and first lady who did not participate. both trumps had covid-19 last fall and they both quietly got vaccinated in january. here are more covid headlines from across the nation. >> i'm kate bennett in washington. former first lady my sichelle oa telling people magazine that she has struggled with mental health during the pandemic, saying she's had low-grade depression and opening up about feelings of anxiety and encouraging other americans to discuss these issues and get help if they, too, are struggling with their mental health, acknowledging these are difficult times. however, obama did say time at home has helped her bond with her two college-age daughters and that she has learned to count her blessings. >> i'm pete muntean in washington. american airlines ceo just told 13,000 of its employees who received notices of possible furloughs said they're promptly canceled, and they can tear them up. all of those workers will receive pay and benefits until september 1st. the airlines are getting billions of dollars from the federal government, and airlines think demand could come surging back as the company reopens and more people get vaccinated. >> i'm jacqueline howard in atlanta. a small number of people thought they were getting the covid-19 vaccine at a clinic near richmond, virginia. it turned out they were empty s syringes. there was no vaccine in them. this happened at an affiliation associated with kroger, but kroger told cnn that all impacted customers were contacted and have received their covid-19 vaccine. we thank these customers for their understanding and have apologized for their inconvenience, end quote. the clinic says it is investigating the matter to make sure it doesn't happen again. >> thank you to my colleagues for that. exactly one year ago, the world health organization declared the coronavirus a global pandemic, bringing the united states and the world to a standstill. the u.s. had 1,000 confirmed cases then. now one year later we're approaching 30 million infections and nearly 537,000 deaths. dr. fauci said not even he could imagine numbers this high. >> i knew we were in for trouble, and you remember, go back, i said we need to be really careful. in fact, that day, at a congressional hearing, i made the statement things are going to get much worse before they get better, and that was at a congressional hearing a year ago today. it was march 11, 2020 i said that, but i did not in my mind think that much worse was going to be 525,000 deaths. >> joining me now is samantha shocker. she is the co-host of "daily blast live" and her brother eric has been in the icu fighting for his life now for almost two months following coronavirus complications. samantha, thank you so much for joining us to talk about this. can you tell us a little bit more about eric and what he's going through right now? >> yes. brianna, first, thank you for having me to share eric's story. i know that millions of people worldwide can sympathize, as you just stated, that coronavirus has affected so many families. eric is -- listen, eric is fighting for his life right now, and when your loved one's in a medically induced coma, you can't physically, obviously, talk to them. when they're intubated, eric has been intubated since early january. he's been on a machine called ekmo. it oxygenates your lungs and heart. that said, my sister-in-law and their two kids have not talked to eric since he's been intubated. we've heard the stories, right, you can't be there physically and you have to have an r.n. or doctor hold up a phone and you have to say those words to your loved one not knowing if you'll ever hear from them again. eric is so strong considering the fact that for two months now he's been on life support and he's been fighting for his life. the doctors say, you know, for someone to be going through everything that he's gone through, procedure after procedure and complication after complication, this man is strong, and this man wants to live. and so he's hanging on, brianna, he's going to make it. but let me tell you, this is difficult. >> look, we see these photos. his beautiful family, he has a lot to live for. we know that he wants to come back and join them. he's 51. i mean, this is a young person. he's very active. you mentioned that he went into this very strong. you know, could you ever have imagined that this is what your family would be up against right now? >> no. brianna, my heart is beating through my chest. i'm used to being on television. i never in a million years would have thought that i would be on the other side advocating for my loved one. and i understand the privilege that i have, that i get that ability to use my platform to advocate for him. but i never thought that my family would go through this, let alone eric. to your point, he is a surfer, a snowboarder, strong lungs. and covid has -- covid is cruel. and, you know, eric no longer has covid. he cleared his covid load because he's so strong way back in january, so these are all covid complications, and now we're in a position where we've run out of options. and we have a very healthy guy otherwise who can't come home to his -- my sister, his wife and their two babies, because of his lungs. so who better to advocate your loved ones than your family. especially because he's a health care worker, my sister is a health care worker, my whole family comes from health care workers, so they're used to advocating for everybody else, and now it's our turn, it's my turn, my sister's turn, our friends' and family's turn to help advocate for him. we just hope no matter how unique eric's situation is with the covid lungs that we can find a team to help our eric live the rest of his life that we know he should be doing. >> and, samantha, what are doctors telling you about his condition? >> well, they compare -- they say your brother-in-law is strong. again, he would not be here today if he didn't have the will to live and the strength to live. but they say his lungs look to be no longer compatible with life. they say when he breathes, they compare it to that of a guppy fish. and they say, you know, we've run out of options. so we have to do everything we can to get eric to a team that -- again, a double lung transplant is rare alone, right, in the world. but to have a covid double lung transplant, covid complications double lung transplant, there's only a few, a handful that have been done in the world. this is uncharted territory. but i strongly believe that our eric can be a case study, that our eric can be an example that this can be done, and it can save other people's lives. so many people are suffering. if anything, brianna, i hope this is a cautionary tale because i know a lot of people are lowering their guard because we have spring break coming up, the vaccine is here, but we're not out of the woods. and i don't want another family to go through this, because it can happen to you. you don't think it's going to happen to you, it can. look at me, look at our story. you do not want to go through this. it is excruciating. >> samantha, i want to thank you for talking to us. we are going to follow this. we are there with you and your family, and we're thinking of you, we're thinking of your sister, your niece and nephew. and we're hoping the best for eric. thank you for coming on. >> thank you. he will prevail, brianna. mark my word. >> he will prevail. samantha, thank you. ahead, tucker carlson's sexist and outrageous comments about women in the military now getting the attention of the u.s. defense secretary. and fireworks erupt on the house floor after a republican congressman says black lives matter doesn't like the traditional family. and moments from now, president biden signs the covid relief bill into law ahead of his prime time address. stand by for that. have you ever seen this before? 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>> reporter: brianna, another military vet charged in the capitol attack, and this time it's a former marine who had top secret security clearance and was assigned to the helicopter marine one between 2010 and 2019. he worked on helicopter maintenance. but prosecutors said on january 6 he was seen facing off with police in the base of the capitol, though he never physically engaged with them. it is a startling arrest since andrews was formerly part of the highly restrictive helicopter squadron for several years in the early 2000s, and it's also just the latest charge against a military veteran. cnn has found veterans are disproportionately represented among the 300 people facing charges so far. at least 29 former and current service members have been charged so far. there's new audio showing former president trump pressuring another georgia election official into overturning ballot votes. the first call was to georgia secretary of state brad raff fenz perger. then he called a georgia election official, telling her not only should she perform fraud but she would be praised for it. >> something happened, something bad happened. puc if you can get to fulton, you'll find things that are unbelievable. fulton is the motherlode, as the expression goes. >> i can assure you our team and the gbi are only interested in the truth and finding the information that's based on the facts. >> it never made sense. and, you know, they dropped ballots. they dropped all these ballots. stacey abrams really terrible. just a terrible thing. i will say this. when the right answer comes out, you'll be praised. >> cnn's senior legal analyst laura coates is with me now. laura, there are two investigations happening. there is one by the georgia secretary of state and there is a criminal one by the fulton county d.a. let's talk about the latter here. do you see the former president breaking any laws in this call we just heard with the investigator? >> his statements there are going to be used and looked at in a comprehensive way, a holistic manner to see if there are other things, any other indications of what he's done. but you can't interfere with an election, you can't encourage the interference of an election, you can't do things like this in order to try to have your hypothesis come true when the evidence just suggests the alternate. what you're hearing here is a little bit of innuendo and statements that are not the direct statements of somebody saying, if you do this, then i reward you with x, or hear my explicit instructions to commit a criminal act, but the implications as part of a larger investigation could very well be there which is why the investigation is happening, and probably increasingly so around what other conversations were had or how it was interested and interpreted. >> in the full six-minute exchange that's been released here, you know, you can hear francis watson. she's not telling the president straight up no. she's saying that basically this is going to be truth-based. i don't know what you sort of take in this. it's a pleasant enough phone call as she is reacting to him. how significant is it for her to say that she felt pressured or not? does that matter? >> well, it is significant because it's part of the larger m.o. of the former president with relations to the actual georgia officials. remember, the fulton county focus, the idea of the stacey abrams statement, alluding to the fact that we all know that one of her extraordinary causes is to encourage widespread voter participation. but there has also been an emphasis on those who have been disenfranchised with different government policies, and the people who have been impacted by voter suppression, we're talking about black and latino voters, and we know what happened in georgia, the shift from red to blue, was very much in large part the reaction from black and hispanic voters and particularly women. so he wanted you to know exactly what he meant and what sort of fraudulent votes he wanted to have talked about. also the idea these ballots have been dropped. i'm not sure what he's referencing in particular about what he's implying about these dropped votes or dropped ballots. but having a phone call from the president of the united states who, although she was involved in a conversation, it really wasn't a give and take. it seemed as though the comments she was making, he continued on a diatribe of sorts, so she was interjecting which is precisely what they want them to say, that we're looking for the truth. so her feelings of pressure in conjunction with his insinuations, his suggestions about other hot button issues, his naming of stacey abrams and the like as part of a larger pattern is going to fuel the investigations even more. >> i do want to switch gears with you now and talk about the trial of the ex-officer accused in the death of george floyd. the judge has reinstated a third-degree murder charge against derek chauvin who is already charged with second-degree murder, which is more severe. he's also facing second-degree manslaughter. laura, explain to us what third-degree homicide is and does it make it harder for the prosecutors to get a charge on that second-degree murder charge? >> so the more options you give a jury, essentially the more availability you have for a conviction. you have them able to say, well, you've met elements in certain things or you haven't met in others. something wrong happened here, and is there a way i can hold him accountable, but it doesn't quite meet the level you're talking about. as you said, brianna, second is a higher charge than third degree. the third degree is normally to be interpreted to be if you are engaged in behavior that could lead to grave bodily harm or substantial risk to life or the loss of life, as long as you didn't have a specific target in mind, as in you were driving down a crowded sidewalk with no one in particular as your victim, traditionally minnesota had been interpreted to mean that you couldn't be held accountable for third degree. but now there was a recent court of appeals decision because of the last sfsh toofficer to actu into trial and be convicted in minnesota and be charged with shooting a person. i'm talking about lawson samore who was accused of killing an australian woman who was weeks away from her wedding, was responding to an assault in her alley and she walked up to his car. he was not convicted of second degree, so he was saying, this shouldn't apply to me. now you have the court in the chauvin case looking at the appeals court decision there where they said, actually, third degree can apply to you, and now he's changed his mind, brianna, to say we're going to include it in this case as well. they've raised now an appealable issue, and i'm curious to see how it all lands, particularly given the fact that last year we understand chauvin was prepared to plead guilty to third-degree murder before attorney general barr stepped in. >> yeah. we will be watching. i know you will be, laura coates. thank you. top generals smacking down fox host tucker carlson about his sexist comments on women in the military. you will hear from a top leader in the military. plus some disturbing news just in involving an intruder at joint base andrews. skin* #1 for psoriasis symptom relief* and #1 for eczema symptom relief* gold bond champion your skin how do we ensure families facing food insecurity get access to their food? 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>> yeah. as you know, barbara, for anyone who has tried to or had to for work get onto joint base andrews, it just defies belief rbelief, in a way, that someone was able to do that. barbara starr from the pentagon. moments from now president biden will sign the massive covid relief bill into law before his prime time address. billionaires are getting a whole lot richer, including warren buffett who just got into the world's most exclusive club. ♪ this could be ♪ hi. you just moved in, right? i would love to tell you about all the great savings you can get for bundling your renter's and car insurance with progressive. -oh, i was just -- -oh, tammy. i found your retainer in the dryer. priceline works with top hotels, to save you up to 60%. these are all great. and when you get a big deal... you feel like a big deal. ♪ did you know prilosec otc can stop frequent heartburn every trip is a big deal. before it begins? ♪ heartburn happens when stomach acid refluxes into the esophagus. prilosec otc uses a unique delayed-release formula that helps it pass through the tough stomach acid. it then works to turn down acid production, blocking heartburn at the source. with just one pill a day, you get 24-hour heartburn protection. prilosec otc. one pill a day, 24 hours, zero heartburn. pnc bank believes that if you can get a pair of goggles that helps with your backhand... ...then you should be able to get a bank account that helps with your budget. yeah! 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