processing. we are just living through until every one of these hostages are home and our soldiers are safe. 16 hours until the truce set ises in. so much to come. thank you. thank you for joining us. this is cnn news central. inside politics starts now. welcome to inside politics. i m in today for dana bash. 15 hours from now, we re expecting the first of dozens of hamas host amgs to walk free out of gaza. they have been captive since october 7th. now the first hostages to be release d are expected to be women and children. in exchange, israel agrees to pause its assault on gaza for four days, release 150 palestinians from israeli prisons, and allow more humanitarian aid into gaza. that could include hundreds of trucks carrying fuel and sup supplies. now for families of the missing, the past 46 days have been unbearable. these next few hours will be just as intense as they wait to find out whether their relative will be among those freed. my family, like all the
we have to comply. makes us feel much more comfortable in the act of rejecting somebody, which we don t want to do. reporter: matthew, who you just heard from there, says he s going to have to hire an extra person just to check people s vaccine statuses. this is something he was not anticipating budgeting for. the national restaurant association is raising concern saying you re essentially asking employees of businesses to be the vaccine police. they re concern ed that could create tensions with customers. but other cities are now looking into what new york has done, the bare, some cbay area. the mayor of boston saying she s not going to require this for businesses in her city. this is going to be going into effect august 16th and it s
china, israel. didn t take a breath for anything else? he was on a a roll. and but he was also touching some thicks this were important to us. nafta in the midwest, we re concern ed about nafta. he got into the nafta discussions. he didn t talk about zte, but he did talk about the concerns about what they ve been doing the us. it was at manu inkated, a very light hearted atmosphere and some of the issues that i think some of my colleagues talked about, we just ran out of time. i understand, but as you said, honor and duty and it s a serious issue when you talk b about john mccain specifically. today, you said to reporters and i quote you, i know it s probably not their style to make
should they be concerned. yeah. should we be concerned? they should be concern ed. i m familiar with white houses, you say. no one is familiar with this kind of white house this as you know chartered waters. the concern is that the more pressure the president comes under, and even in a normal presidency, pressure is a daily thing. the more pressure he comes under, the more ad hoc his actions become. so, we ve seen this bizarre week in which he had this gun event. and you get the feeling he uses televisions as a television event. representatives on both sides, he met quietly with the nra and jerks back and forth between decisions. the trade decision, which apparently was done without against the advice of most of his economic and national security adviser s advisers.
coverage, certainly affected a lot of people. and i think a lot of women were concern ed about that, and i knew it would be tough to i won all women, but i lost white women, and i knew that would be tough. but i ended up, actually, getting more white women s votes than obama had in 2012. so this was a longer term democratic nominee problem. so i knew i was going to have to work hard on it. when that happened and the way really, it was a horrific two to three day story and then it sort of dropped, because, remember, within an hour of that tape going public. wikileaks. wikileaks dropped john podesta s e-mails. i struggled with that. i thought, why would somebody find what largely i think could be described as boar ing e-mails more significant than words coming out of trump s mouth. also at that debate, it was the most tense room i ve ever been in for the first 30