Transcripts For CNN The Lead With Jake Tapper

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well, guess what? they're going to be getting that check soon. >> that $1,400 check could land in your bank account as soon as this weekend, president biden said. democratic congressional leaders were also present to tout the plan. though not a single republican was there, given that not one republican voted for the legislation. president biden is going to try to boost public support for the law as he marks two new dates on every americans' calendar, may 1st. that's when he says every adult will be eligible to get a covid vaccine. and july 4th, to mark sfg a new independence from coronavirus with small gatherings with friends and family. though, we should note, many americans did that last fourth of july. right now about 66 million americans have gotten one vaccine dose with 2.2 million doses being administered every day. now president biden wants to m maintain and speed up that pace. >> wish i could come out and shake hands with every one of you. >> reporter: moments ago, a rose garden victory dance for president biden as he touted his first major piece of legislation. >> it's one thing to pass the american rescue plan. it's going to be another thing to implement it. >> reporter: because the plan was passed with zero republican support, the ceremony was bicameral but not bipartisan. >> we democrats made promises. we said if we gained the senate, kept the house and elected the president, we would finally get things done. >> president biden, vice president harris and their spouses will fan out across the country as he seeks to ensure that the american rescue plan lives up to its name. on the road, biden is also expected to tout the promises he made in his prime time address. >> if we do this together, by july 4th, there's a good chance you, your families and friends will be able to get together in your backyard or neighborhood and have a cookout, barbecue and celebrate independence day. >> reporter: but biden said his july 4th timeline comes with conditions. >> i need every american to do their part. that's not hyperbole. i need you. >> reporter: meanwhile, top aides are cautioning it won't be a complete return to normal by july 4th. >> we're not talking about a july 4th celebration on the mall. we're not quite there yet, right? we're not talking about soccer stadiums being filled in communities across the country. >> reporter: to achieve his goal, biden is directing states to make all adults eligible for the vaccine no later than may 1st with this caveat. >> that doesn't mean everyone is going to have that shot immediately but it means you will be able to get in line beginning may 1. >> reporter: one challenge health officials are still facing is vaccine hesitancy. poll showing republicans are more hesitant to get vaccinated than democrats. >> we recognize that we may not be the most effective messenger to communicate with hard-core supporters of the former president. >> reporter: jake, a reminder, those stimulus checks will start to go out this weekend. as for the rest of the plan, you heard president biden say earlier the devil is going to be in the details and how they get this implemented. they will have an event here at the white house monday to talk about that. they've yet to name who it is that's going to oversee it. they're going to put someone in charge of that. i would be remiss if i did not wish you a happy birthday. >> no need to remind me. thank you so much, kaitlan collins. appreciate it. jackie, we've seen president biden, so far, undersell, presumably so he could then overdeliver. he talked about 1 million vaccine shots' day. >> right. >> though when he took office the pace was already at 198,000 a day. do you think his new goals for may 1st and july 4th are part of that strategy, underselling and overdelivering? >> it's interesting. experts we've spoken to at "the daily beast" aren't so sure. one of the biggest challenges in terms of distribution is that this is up to the states and each state is handling it a different way. maybe some of the smaller states he may be able to meet these goals but in larger states, perhaps not. kaitlan mentioned vaccine hesitancy. there's a lot of factors, why i think you have the president using the caveats, the devil is in the details and it's up to -- you have to do your part, that sort of thing. it is striking he put these hard deadlines for these milestones. he's going to be held to that. >> today the white house with an not say what specific metrics they wanted to see to make that july 4th goal happen. >> right. >> what do you make of that? if we see a surge of cases for whatever reason, including the new variants, is there a risk here for president biden? will he be blamed? >> yeah, i think there is a risk. he said last night in a speech, look, if i fail, i'm going to tell you i failed. i'm going to tell you the truth and be honest with you of the i think we can take him at his word on that. there are variations in the states on all of this. and i think that if there's a surge of cases, we don't know why there would be a surge of cases. maybe it's not only because of vaccine hesitancy, but maybe it's because, as our polls show, 77% of the people think that the -- you know, that we're through covid basically and they let down their guard. there are all kinds of reasons things can still go awry. and i think sort of setting these deadlines was not only risky business, but i think it was a way for the white house, which has been talking about the dark winter for so long, it was a way for them to give people a little optimism. like oh, wait a minute, it really is around the corner if we just do our part. >> take a listen to how president biden says we're going to achieve those two milestones, may 1st and july 4th. >> we're going to go from a million shots a day that i promised in december, before i was sworn in, to maintaining beating our current pace of 2 million shots a day. >> so, maintaining and beating where we are right now, which is 2 million shots a day. notably, he's not putting a new number on doses a day. he's not saying 3 million, 2.5 million, but saying maintaining or beating. that gives him a lot of wiggle room. again i see this as part of the underpromise and overdeliver strategy. >> and the other thing that he can't really control is the production of the vaccine, because right now that has been slower, i think, than the white house anticipated. so, yeah, they definitely need this wiggle room. another thing i didn't mention earlier and should have, different states are dealing with lifting restrictions differently in terms of these factors. texas doesn't have any, any more. will we see spikes there with all these variants? that is possible. again, there are a lost things that could go awry here. this is a risk, putting hard deadlines on everything from schools to vaccinations. >> gloria, president biden is vowing only a majority of k through 8 classes open up by the end of his first 100 days but has gotten funding for school upgrades through this covid relief legislation. he has prioritized vaccinating teachers. why not make that goal a bit loftier? is it again part of this underpromise? >> it could be. these changes in schools take a while. they just don't happen overnight. you get the funding. then you have to get more classrooms, put dividers between students. all the stuff that costs a lot of money, as you know. there maybe a little in getting this all done. again, you don't want to prochls something to parents who want their chern to go back to school and then not being able to deliver on that. >> yeah. >> they're being really, really careful, some say too careful, about getting kids black in classroom. >> jackie, gloria, thank you. have a good weekend. >> happy birthday. >> thank you. >> it's where george floyd gasped sochl his last breaths but that memorial is also a source of tension in the twin cities. we'll go inside to show you how. >> grandparent getting to hug their grandkids for the first time in a year. a hope that normal is approaching with a warning the pandemic is far from over. >> miss you. >> miss you, too. >> hey! but i've seen centuries of this. with one companion that hedges the risks you choose and those that choose you. the physical seam of a digital world, traded with a touch. my strongest and closest asset. the gold standard, so to speak ;) people call my future uncertain. but there's one thing i am sure of... keeping your oysters business growing has you swamped. you need to hire. i need indeed indeed you do. the moment you sponsor a job on indeed you get a shortlist of quality candidates from a resume data base claim your seventy-five-dollar credit when you post your first job at indeed.com/promo at novartis, our goal is to help keep cosentyx accessible and affordable. if you're taking cosentyx and your insurance or coverage changes or you need help paying cosentyx connect is here to help. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting, get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms, if your inflammatory bowel disease symptoms develop or worsen or if you've had a vaccine, or plan to. serious allergic reactions may occur. call us or visit us online. we're here for you. - [narrator] grubhub perks give you deals on all the food that makes you boogie. call us or visit us online. (upbeat music) get the food you love with perks from- - [crowd] grubhub. a major milestone ahead in the health lead and it's a good one. more than 100 million covid vaccines, more than 100 million have been administered in the u.s. since shots starting going into arms in december. covid deaths have dropped 48%. hospitalizations also trending down with a 48% drop in the last month. daily cases of covid also down 47% since february. now, despite all this, health experts are warning do not get complacent. they caution, we're nowhere near done with covid, as cnn's amora walker reports. >> take off your mask. >> reporter: after one long year, grandparents finally able to hug their children and grandchildren. >> my daughter and granddaughter came to my apartment to give me a little gift, they said, and the gift was the prescription from the doctor and it said you are allowed to hug your granddaughter. >> reporter: more reunions like these are on the horizon. greater numbers with 2.9 vaccinations reported today. prime time address setting a date to get closer to normal by the fourth of july. imploring everyone to get vaccinated. >> i need you. i need every american to do their part. >> reporter: encouraging states to make may 1st everyone eligible to get the shots. >> may 1st you should be able to make a date to get a shot if you haven't had one already. >> reporter: restaurants, gyms, places of worship at full capacity. mask mandate and social distancing compliances will remain in place. restaurants to increase to 75% with masking and social distancing still required. it it's scenes like these in florida that make officials nervous. officials in miami beach tell cnn they expect the highest number of tourists since the pandemic began this weekend and next. >> everyone keeps saying covid doesn't exist here in florida so -- >> reporter: prompting the superintendent of atlanta public schools to move the district to virtual learning for one week after students return. tsa reporting a spike in air travel. tsa screened 1.28 million people on thursday, making it the third busiest day at american airports since the pandemic started. the cdc, however, is cautioning against travel even for the vaccinated, saying it would consider revising its guidance once more people get their shots. >> a lot of them have come through our travel corridors. we're being extra cautious right now with travel. >> reporter: and, jake, you can see all around me that the spring break crowds have already begun to descend upon miami beach. as i was mentioning, it was expected to be one of the busyest weekends since the pandemic began for the greater miami area. look at the numbers. i'm told by tourism officials, they project a 72% hotel occupancy rate for this month of march, compare that to 88% in march of 2019. yes, before the pandemic. when you compare the two, not a big difference between then and now. >> amar a. walker in miami, thank you. let's bring in dr. sanjay gupta. sanjay, there is nuance in the president's push to make all adults eligible for a vaccine by may 1st. even biden acknowledges not everybody will have a shot in their arm by may 1st, but can start getting in line and there will be enough vaccine for them. do you think that's true, that there will be enough vaccine to meet the possible demand by may 1st? >> yeah. i think numbers wise, there will be enough vaccine. we've been sort of trying to piece this together as well. look at the three vaccines that are out there, moderna and pfizer, we knew there would be 200 million doses of each of those. of course, it's two shots each. that's 100 million people for each of those vaccines. what we've learned over the last day or couple of days is what's happening with joh johnson & johnson, we knew there would be 20 million doses by the end of march. then we were told by the beginning of july, there should be 100 million doses total. now we're hearing johnson & johnson lot will be accelerated as well. that may have something to do that they're bringing merck, another pharmaceutical company to help with that production. logi logistics, it's a challenge, especially to get to the harder-to-reach areas. everyone can sign up, everyone eligible by may 1st and over the month, 250 million people roughly, if they wanted, total, will be vaccinated by then. >> biden was quick to clarify for backyard cookouts to be held. >> that doesn't mean large events but it does mean small groups will be able to get together. >> sanjay, we saw in amara's piece, spring break in there is going to happen. there are a lot of people there, that are converging on the spring break destinations. i know the concern about outdoor activity is much less than the concern about indoor activity. you see states relaxing the rules on masks. soon that might not apply in the workplace. what about -- what are we learning about a plan possibly coming from the biden administration when it comes to when people should mask, especially at work? >> yeah. this is really interesting. this is something that's sort of being planned almost since the beginning of this administration. so this has to do with an organization called oshaa. they regulate lots of different, both public and private, workplaces. the situation is this. the federal government may say we're recommending masks through the cdc. 16 states at least have lifted their mask mandates. now this third organization may come in and say okay, that's fine. but when it comes to the workplace not only do you have to wear a mask but you have to wear a certain type of mask, specific filtration of mask. if you don't, there may be fines. it gets a little complicated, jake. but we'll hear about this on monday whether that sort of regulation will come into play. >> putting off other important medical care at alarming rates today, dr. rochelle walensky says children may be less at risk for covid, but how much are they more at risk for other diseases because they're not going to hospitals to get these immunizations? >> well, i mean, this is a significant concern. you may remember, jake, before we were talking about covid, a year and a half before that, there were measles outbreaks around the country. a lot of that was because of vaccine hesitancy. it's not a new issue. people were hesitant about those childhood vaccines as well. these were preventible diseases that may have resurgences because people haven't been getting their immunizimmunizati. not because of hesitancy, but because people haven't been going to their doctor during this time. measles is a good example of something we may see recurrences of. >> hope not but we'll see what happens. dr. sanjay gupta, thank you. the year after the shooting death of breonna taylor, her mother is still waiting for justice and talking to cnn. i'm a verizon engineer. we built our 5g nationwide so millions of people could do what they love in verizon 5g quality. and in parts of many cities, we have ultra wideband, the fastest 5g in the world. this is 5g built right. only from verizon. when all this is over, and the world starts finding its way back, will you be the same person you were, before it began? 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>> the police, they need to work on themselves. there's a distrust. they've not corrected themselves. the police work for om people and not to others. >> the police chief prayed at the intersection while the city raged over his death says it's time for the square to open up again. >> anyone at that space says it's about uplifting that intersection in his name, yet the violence is continuing, the homicides are continuing, i would disagree vehemently with that position. >> that will not happen easily. the community has given the city 24 written demands in exchange for opening up the square. >> if you lift those barriers without first providing restorative justice to the community, people are going to forget about the harm and the trauma caused to this community. >> now, janel austin is on the board of the george floyd global memorial. they're planning a pop-up art installation very soon. there's news of the settlement, of that $27 million unprecedented precivil rights settlement with floyd's family, there is $500,000 that has been set aside for that area, 38th and chicago, for the business district there, to try to help them recover. jake? >> sara sidner, thank you for that report. one year tomorrow since 26-year-old breonna taylor was shot and killed during a flawed police raid inside her apartment. for her family, amidst the heartbreak, there is a sense of disbelief. they say 364 days later, there's been no justice for breona, as jason carroll reports. >> i never get to a point where i'm over what happened to her. >> reporter: tamika palmer says she will mark the one-year anniversary of her daughter breonna taylor's death, to attend a rally to remind people justice has not been served. >> it's been a year for people but every day has been march 13th for me still zblfr day? >> every day. >> reporter: march 13th, 2020, the day taylor was killed during a botched police raid at her apartment. >> there will always be that sense of anger because you know she should be here. >> reporter: none of the officers who raided the apartment have been charged in her death. instead a grand jury brought charges of felony one charges against one of them, brett hakinson, for firing through taylor's wall intoey aneighbor's apartment. defending the police's actions, saying they were justified because taylor's boyfriend, kenneth walker, fired at the fors first that night. >> the male was holding a gun, arms extends, in a stance. >> reporter: he says the officers never identified thesz but officers say they did. charges were dismissed against walker, who was initially accused of attempted murder for shooting at the officers. >> he's supposed to say thank you and walk away? no. there has to be consequence, accountability. >> it's key to not only people like walker and tamika palmer, but to thousands of demonstrators such as pastor timothy findlay, who protested over the past year, calling for police reforms in the wake of taylor's death and the deaths of other african-americans at the hands of police. >> we think about march 13th now, it's breonna taylor, not just remembering her name but it's become a rally call for justice in our city, justice in our state. >> reporter: last year the city of louisville paid taylor's family $12 million in a civil settlement and passed breonna's law, which bans no-knock warrants and demands the use of cameras during body searches. and a top-to-bottom review of the louisville metro police department. >> there's a lot to do. we've done a lot but we're going to keep working at this. >> reporter: it's still not enough for palmer, with no officers charged in her daughter's death, she says justice is something that still alludes her w the help of her attorney, she penned an open letter to president joe biden in "the washington post" asking his administration to enact national pol policies to hold police accountable. >> i guess i'm hopeful because we're at a point of reckoning where if we don't fix it, we're going to be in a lot of trouble. >> she's more hopeful than me. >> why is that? >> it's a trust thing. that the point, i don't trust th them. >> jake, this update. taylor's mother filed a complaint with the louisville metro police department's professional standards unit, alleging six officers allegedly filed false information about breonna taylor related to the raid. today, the metro police responded. a spokesperson saying they're taking this allegation, complaint very seriously you and it will be fully investigated. and also saying they believe in full transparency. jake? >> jason carroll in louisville, kentucky. thank you very much. son of a governor and current governor who was once married to a kennedy says he's a political outsider as scandals close in on him. that's next. hi, my name is sam davis and i'm going to tell you about exciting plans available to anyone with medicare. many plans provide broad coverage and still may save you money on monthly premiums and prescription drugs. with original medicare you're covered for hospital stays and doctor office visits but you have to meet a deductible for each and then you're still responsible for 20% of the cost. next, let's look a medicare supplement plan. as you can see they cover the same things as original medicare and they also cover your medicare deductibles and co-insurance. but they often have higher monthly premiums and no prescription drug coverage. now, let's take a look at humana's medicare advantage plans. with a humana medicare plan, hospital stays, doctor office visits and medicare deductibles are covered. and of course, most humana medicare advantage plans include prescription drug coverage. in fact, in 2019 humana medicare advantage prescription drug plan members saved an estimated 7,800 dollars on average on their prescription costs. most humana medicare advantage plans include a silver sneakers fitness program at no extra cost. dental and vision coverage is now included with most humana medicare advantage plans and you get telehealth coverage with a zero-dollar copay. you get all this for as low as a zero-dollar monthly plan premium in many areas. and your doctor and hospital may already be a part of humana's large network. if you want the facts call right now for the free decision guide from humana. there is no obligation so call the number on your screen right now to see if your doctor is in our network. to find out if you can save on your prescriptions and to get our free decision guide. humana a more human way to healthcare. - [narrator] grubhub perks give you deals on all the food that makes you boogie. (upbeat music) get the food you love with perks from- - [crowd] grubhub. if you smell gas, you're too close. leave the structure, call 911, keep people away, and call pg&e right after so we can both respond out and keep the public safe. if you see wires down, treat them all as if they're hot and energized. stay away from any downed wire, call 911, and call pg&e right after so we can both respond out and keep the public safe. >> in our politics lead, new york governor andrew cuomo today blamed cancel culture as a list of democrats calling for his resignation continue to grow. 14 of new york's 19 dongional democrats now say he should step down. cuomo today, once again, said he's not going anywhere, as new york state legislators officially launch an impeachment inquiry. shimon prokupecz joins me now. he seemed to go after his fellow democrats calling for his resideg resignation. >> reporter: yes, saying they were rushing to judgment and it's dangerous to do so without these investigations being finalized. >> the people of new york should not have confidence in a politician who takes a position without knowing any facts or substance. people know the difference between playing politics, bowing to council counsel, cancel culture and the truth. >> reporter: doing impeachment investigation and, of course, the state attorney general conducting her investigation. cuomo is urging everyone to wait. wait for those investigations to finish before rushing to judgment. meanwhile, cuomo says he has no intention on retire -- resigning. he says he's going to keep governing. he has a budget to deal with and, of course, the pandemic. his hope, he says, is to deal with the vaccinations and then get a budget for the state. >> reporter: shimon prokupecz in new york, thank you very much. let me bring in, in addition to gloria borger, deanna paul. one of the eye-raising comments governor cuomo made is that people are gunning for him because he's not of the political club. take a listen. >> part of this is i am not part of the political club and, you know what? i'm proud of it. >> so, he's the incumbent governor. his father was three-term governor of new york. the field was cleared for him so he could run for attorney general of new york. he was, at one point, married to a kennedy. i mean, how can he say he's not in the political club? >> jake, that's a great question. he can say that, but at the end of the day there's bad news ahead for governor cuomo. we have the state legislature who opened an impeachment inquiry. state investigation into claims of sexual harassment. and there's a federal investigation into whether there was an undercount of deaths at nursing homes during the pandemic. >> there are accounts by several women, at least five, mostly former employees, accusing him of inappropriate kick, sexual harassment. there are hard documents, confirmation from a member of his staff that his office hid that nursing home death data. i mean, how could lawmakers -- what's your reaction to these allegations that this is cancel culture? >> it's not cancel culture at all. and i think, you know, he picked up a political phrase that people kind of, you know, listen to today and say, oh, yeah, yeah, that's cancel culture, and maybe he thinks it will be good for him politically to say that. i have no idea. and maybe he's just trying to talk to those democrats who are saying that he ought to resign. what this is about is somebody who has got some credible charges leveled against him coming on top of a pre-existing problem dealing with nursing homes and hiding the covid numbers in nursing homes allegedly. and that is being investigated. so, one thing piles on top of another and politicians get anxious, and they get nervous, and they get upset. and that's what's going on, but it is not cancer cul culture. >> deanna, one of cuomo's accusers worked for the governor from 2013 to 2015. she said of working in his office it's a very scary place to be, especially if you're yo young, female and don't have a lot of connections. i have regrets of not calling it out because there are a lot of women who had worse than me, unquote. the accusers just keep coming forward. how long can he continue to say that he never did anything wrong? >> that's actually the reason that ana liss did come forward when we spoke to her. she said there's this normalized culture in the office. i'll give you an example. she talks about the governor coming up to her desk while shelves sitting there, kissing her hand, asking her personal questions about her dating life, whether or not she had a boyfriend. we talked to several former and current officer office workers about this environment. several said those calls they found to be intimidating. ana liss said i felt intimidated. >> whether governor cuomo's office leaked information about the first accuser in order to tarnish her reputation and whether that's ethical or legal. there's now an impeachment inquiry in this democratic-led legislature and the majority of new york democratic house members are calling on cuomo to resign. do you think he's going to have to step down, or is the example of donald trump and the example of virginia governor northam really the example he's following here? stick it out and eventually it's going to go away? >> i don't pretend to know governor cuomo. i can't tell you what his nature is. what i know about him, from watching him, is he's somebody who seem to be pretty much a fighter. in his third term of governor and he has to make a decision about whether he wants to run for another term, which he could. he could say, of course, i want to finish the work that i've got to do. today he outlined how much work he has to do. maybe he could say to people i promise i'm not going to run again. you don't know what he will do because you don't know what these investigations are going to say. but, you know, he is up against it right now. and it is part of every public conversation that he is having, and it becomes more and more difficult to do your job in public service when everywhere you go you're being dogged by this. >> deplora, deanna, thanks to both of you. have great weekends to both of you. while other cities are reopening schools, los angeles is waiting more than a month. parents in l.a. want to know why of the stay with us. ♪ ♪ (quiet piano music) ♪ ♪ comfort in the extreme. the lincoln family of luxury suvs. voiceover: riders. wanderers on the road of life. the journey is why they ride. when the road is all you need, there is no destination. uh, i-i'm actually just going to get an iced coffee. well, she may have a destination this one time, but usually -- no, i-i usually have a destination. yeah, but most of the time, her destination is freedom. nope, just the coffee shop. announcer: no matter why you ride, progressive has you covered with protection starting at $79 a year. voiceover: 'cause she's a biker... please don't follow me in. in our national lead, so many school closed last year. march 1st, chicago schools allowed kindergarten to fifth graders to return part time. but kids in los angeles are still learning virtually with a tentative agreement for schools to reopen next month. and beyond this struggle, many parents worry that the at-home learning model may hurt their children's future, as cnn's kyung lah reports. >> you have one minute. >> reporter: for an entire year, this is life in virtual school. dad, kevin corbin, cooks breakfast. >> do what you've got to do. >> i know. >> reporter: mom, michelle, rushes downstairs. she's the property manager for the apartment they live in. >> so you're running? >> up and down, up and down, nonstop all day. >> this is kevin from postmates. >> reporter: los angeles public schools need to reopen says corbin. >> thank you. we're winging it, doing the best we can. >> reporter: he says his career as an events coordinator dryied up during covid-19 so he's doing what he can. >> we didn't think it would be this hard. >> reporter: while they say their kids are being forgotten. >> it's definitely going to be felt because -- >> reporter: you feel it? >> every day. every day. >> reporter: corbin see this is in other large cities, elementary school students back in the classroom, new york students also back. lausd announced a plan this week to return it's students to in-person learning in april, reaching a tentative deal amid teacher vaccinations and new safety protocols. >> i don't understand what the problem is with lausd. >> i don't think there's enough urgency toward the students. >> reporter: education has been central for this couple who met in college and see it as a key to success for black children. >> struggling with our education is another fight that we can't lose. >> you're not paying attention. >> reporter: but a price is paid in this pandemic. >> she does her work. she just needs a little help. >> reporter: not one minute passes all morning without an interruption for 16-year-old keila. >> what do i have to do? >> just wait. >> reporter: does it make it hard for you? >> yes, very. >> reporter: how have your grade been? >> not as good as they were before. >> i'm just praying she graduates from high school and that's sad to feel that way. >> reporter: is it her future you worry about? >> i'm definitely worried about her future. >> reporter: the powerful union representing los angeles teacher says it has no regrets waiting for more staff vaccinations. >> the majority of our students are children of color and the majority of them are latino. >> reporter: but the longer it takes to go back, say the corbins, the more fragile their children's futures remain. >> reporter: local surveys do show parents of color are disproportionately worried about sen sending their children back to public school as compared to white parents. that mirrors a lot of national surveys. jake, the corbins say they worry more about the long-term impact on communities of color. for example, that 16-year-old daughter that you saw, she now no longer believes that she can go to college. jake? >> kyung lah, thank you for that important report. we have a cnn live special, back to school, kids and the fight to reopen. we'll speak to miguel cardona among others tonight at 9:00 p.m. former trump confidante roger stone next. of your financing. at carvana, get personalized terms, browse for cars that fit youbudget, then customize your down payment anmonthly payment. and these aren't made-up nuers. it's what you'll really pay, right down to the penny. whether you're shopping or just looking. it only takes a few seconds, and it won't affect your credit score. finally! a totally different way to finance your ride. only from carvana. the new way to buy a car. new projects means new project managers. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. the moment you sponsor a job on indeed you get a short list of quality candidates from our resume database. claim your seventy five dollar credit, when you post your first job at indeed.com/home. ♪ in boxing or any other business, one day, you're gonna take a hit you didn't see coming. do you stay down? 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[announcer] and this fight is a long way from over, leonard is coming back. ♪ ♪ - [narrator] grubhub perks give you deals on all the food that makes you boogie. ♪ (upbeat music) get the food you love with perks from- - [crowd] grubhub. how great is it that we get to tell everybody how liberty mutual customizes your car insurance - grub what you love. so you only pay for what you need? i mean it... uh-oh, sorry... oh... what? i'm an emu! no, buddy! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty. ♪ we want to take a moment now to remember just one of the 532,000 americans who have died from coronavirus. gary barnes served as commissioner for henry county, georgia, for the last eight years. before that, he spent 31 years in public service as a volunteer firefighter, chairman of the county fair, chairman of public works, coach of little league. he delivered meals on wheels with his wife, becky. his family says one of gary's favorite past times was watching his sons and grandchildren play sports. he was 66 years old. our hearts go out to the family today. may his memory be a blessing. tune in to this sunday's state of the union. i'm talking to dr. anthony fauci, governor larry hogan, stacey abrams and veronica escobar from texas, 9:00 a.m. and noon eastern on sunday. you can email me -- i'm sorry, tweet me @jaketapper. our coverage continues now on cnn. i will see you sunday morning. welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. i'm wolf blitzer in "the situation room." we're following new developments in the covid-19 pan demic. president biden declaring, and i'm quoting now, help is here. as he touted his new relief package in the rose garden a short time ago. that comes on the bold new timeline for recovery revealed last night in his first prime-time address to the nation. the president is warning

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