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decision, how do you control so no one else that's not a human being can make those firing decisions. these are all things being developed as we speak. one consistent point, jessica, that age is already here. >> it is here now. and before we let you go, i also want to ask you about u.s. aid, both to israel and ukraine. but specifically the ukraine aid seems to be somewhat in limbo, both of them need to get over the finish line. what are you hearing on that front? >> yeah, the irony of this, and i hear this from lawmakers in both parties, is that large ma majorities in both parties, the senate and the house, want to pass both israel and ukraine aid. there is a small population, particularly among republicans in the house, who are standing in the way. the leadership won't bring this to the floor. so negotiations are under way to get over that. they've been focused in the senate where you would have a combination of things. ukraine, israel, but also new measures for border security. and that appears to be the price that democrats, the administration are going to have to pay in order to get both ukraine and israel aid together over the finish line. and we discussed this earlier, there's not necessarily broad democratic opposition to that. a lot of democratic border state democrats, they are for some changes, some increase in standards, restrictions at the border, particularly for asylum seekers, but those negotiations are still under way. it's happening with enormous urgency on the ground, certainly in gaza and around israel, but also in ukraine as well. because the prospects right now for major process for ukrainian forces, they don't look very rosy at this point. >> jim sciutto for us in simi valley. thank you so much for the reporting and the update. we appreciate it. let's go to our top story, israel's war against hamas, where negotiations to free more hostages have hit a, quote, dead-end, according to israeli officials. today israel recalled its team of negotiators from qatar, even though there are still more than 130 hostages still trapped in gaza. a short time ago, israel's defense minister blamed hamas for, quote, explicitly violating their truce agreement to return all women and children, saying there are still 15 women and two children being held by that terror group. with the truce now broken, israel has stepped up its attacks on gaza, saying it has launched more than 400 strikes on the enclave in the first 24 hours since the truce expired. israel is expanding strikes as well, hitting targets in southern gaza. we're going to take you there in just a moment, but first, we're going to stay here domestically, we will go back out to the middle east in a moment. we're going to turn to the historic expulsion of george santos, ousted in a vote yesterday, and it's leaving some people wondering what happens to santos now. he's still facing criminal indictment, which includes allegations of defrauding his constituents, using campaign funds for botox, designer clothes and luxury trips. now democratic new york governor kathy hochul says she's prepared to name someone to fill that vacancy for the rest of the term. joining me now is "new york times" reporter grace ashford and cnn senior political analyst, ron brownstein. it's great to have both of you. ron, let's start first with you. long island has evolved toward the republican party in the trump era, it's become a bit more red. can the democrats reverse that trend with the santos replacement, and help people understand why the republican leadership was very nervous about this because it makes their small majority even smaller. >> right, they have a small majority, they're down another seat. on paper, this is a district that voted for joe biden in 2020, one of the 18 districts held by house republicans that voted for biden. and many republicans are worried that if you kick out santos the democrats will pick up the seat. they may still be favored, jessica, but it is going to be tougher than i think kind of conventional wisdom has it. long island really is one of the few suburban areas anywhere in the country that is trending toward republicans in the trump era. crime, immigration, and affordability, 80% of this district is nassau county. biden won nassau county by 10 points, but lee zeldin, the republican gubernatorial candidate won it in 2022, and trump led biden in nassau county by 7. biden's approval is only 41%. democrats have an advantage in the former representative there, but this could be a rougher ride than generally assumed. >> grace, santos is still facing 23 felony charges to which he's pleaded not guilty. what's next for his court case? could he go to jail? what does it look like within the criminal justice system? >> sure, thanks so much for having me. so as you said, santos is facing 23 felonies, and up to potentially 22 years in prison. some serious charges, wire fraud, money laundering and aggravated identity theft, which has a two-year mandatory minimum. he is due in court in a couple of weeks, his trial date is set for september of 2024. that's obviously some time off. we could see a sooner resolution if he makes a deal with prosecutors. thus far he's seemed uninterested in doing that. beyond his criminal case, though, he suggested that we have not seen the last of him. he said that he wants to write a book. he has not ruled out some sort of political future, though he said definitely not in the state of new york. and he didn't even really rule out reality tv, at one point in a joking exchange with reporters said, maybe not now but maybe in the future "dancing with the stars." >> it is a remarkable story. ron, i would want to know, if you could help us zoom out for a minute, and it's a moment in time in the sense that we don't see -- expulsions are very rare, and especially in the era of trump, republicans are loathe to really punish their own or hold them accountable, and yet in this case many republican members did vote to expel him, including a lot of the new york republicans. but we did see the republican leadership trying to keep him. what do you make of this moment? honestly, the average american looks at the house of representatives and goes, what's going on up there? >> look, i think santos was so blatant and unrepentant in what he did. you saw yesterday, even a republican member of congress put on social media that santos had misused his own credit card and his mother's credit card to charge campaign contributions. i think he just offended at some level, just fundamentally offended the sensibility of his colleagues. and compared to trump, george santos really can't threaten them. what we've seen is this incredible deference to trump among republicans really up and down the ballot, and that is both because they feel they need his constituency, his ability to mobilize voters, but also because they fear what he can do to them if he stands up against them. and santos, i think, also has to be seen as part of what is a worrying trend of more members, particularly on the republican side, viewing a seat in the house less as an opportunity to make law or to represent their constituents, and more to establish a political brand, almost a showmanship brand, and treating it like a reality show, even while they are in office. and he's not the only one i think you could apply that characterization to, but he's certainly the one who combined that with the most overt law breaking. >> grace, to that end, santos said yesterday, to hell with this place, he said he's getting out of there. you mentioned he could be on "dancing with the stars," maybe he wants to write a book. does he still have congressional privileges? what comes next? to ron's pointe, it is the most direct example of people really making a seat in the house of representatives about them and how they can further their brand, as it were. >> right. so to answer your question, he could return to make use of those house privileges, i believe to use the gym. he's indicated that's not high on his list of priorities, understandably, perhaps. that said, i think he still has a lot of kind of unfinished business in the house. he made some threats as he was leaving, and in the days leading up to his expulsion, saying that he would be showing the receipts, as they say, about other members of congress. he's been tweeting allegations against some other members of the republican conference, saying he's going to be filing ethics reports against other people. but, really, his chief concern is going to be in the coming months, this criminal case. and i think that's really the place to watch. >> yeah. grace ashford and ron brownstein, we're going to leave it there. thanks to both of you. >> thank you. and we want to go now back to tel aviv, where cnn's matthew chance is standing by. matthew, you were just hearing sirens where you are there in tel aviv. tell us what you are seeing. >> reporter: yeah, within the past few minutes. we've been at a vigil for the hostages that are being held inside gaza. within the past few minutes t sirens in tel aviv started wailing and the whole area, i think we've got video of moments. i can play that. you can hear there's some police going past now as well. but, yeah, so i'm not quite sure what you're seeing. there you are. [ sirens ] [ sirens ] >> reporter: there you are. you can see that's the kind of nightly occurrence that's happening now. that's the sort of thing that's happening every night now in tel aviv as the military operation by israel inside the gaza strip continues. hamas and other groups have the resources, it seems, to fire rockets out of the gaza strip into israeli territory, and that's what that was a response to. as i say, jessica, i was here at a vigil for the hostages inside the gaza strip that are still there, some 130 or so israelis and other nationalities still held by hamas and other militant groups inside the gaza strip. this was a big deal to sort of make sure that everybody was doing whatever they could to get them out. and of course it's the priority of the families and many people in israel to get those hostages out as soon as possible. there's a bit of a difference of opinion in how best to do that. there are those that believe that negotiations and everything should be done as soon as possible to make sure those people come out alive, if possible. and there are others that think, well, maybe the current phase of negotiations has run out, and it may be better -- this is what the israeli government is doing, to put more military pressure on hamas, to hopefully get that to bear fruit and get hamas to release more hostages. there's a difference of opinion of how to get there. underlying it, a great deal of unity across israel. the country needs to do everything they can to get the hostages back alive, if possible. >> matthew chance, glad you were able to take cover and thank you for that reporting. we sure do appreciate it. coming up, officials say a protester is in critical condition after setting herself on fire outside the israeli consulate in atlanta. what we are learning about that incident next. officials say a woman is in critical condition after attempting to set herself on fire yesterday outside of an atlanta building that houses the israeli consulate. police are calling the incident an extreme act of political protest. officials say a security guard tried to stop the woman and received burns in the process. they say gasoline was used as an accelerant and a palestinian flag was recovered at the scene. cnn's rafael romo is joining us now. knowing all of that, what else are you learning in this investigation today? >> reporter: well, as you can imagine, jessica, the incident prompted a robust response not only from the atlanta police department, but also federal law enforcement agencies. the site of the incident, a building that houses the israeli consulate here in atlanta. first of all, in addition to the two individuals that you mentioned, the woman who set herself on fire and the security guard who tried to stop her, no one else was hurt. atlanta police say at 12:17 p.m. friday, the woman set herself on fire using gasoline as an accelerant outside the building located in the midtown neighborhood here in atlanta. the security officer rushed and tried to stop her, but was unsuccessful and suffered burns to his wrist and leg, according to police the woman suffered third-degree burns throughout her body and is now in critical condition at grady hospital here in atlanta. atlanta police chief darren schierbaum described it as an extreme act of political protest and wanted to make something very clear. let's take a listen. >> the community is safe, this department is aware of the tensions that are present right now in the jewish community and the muslim community. we have dedicated patrols occurring at this location and other jewish and muslim communities in the city. >> reporter: chief schierbaum wanted to make it clear that the incident appeared to be an isolated protest and that there was, quote, no nexus of terrorism. the chief also said the staff inside the israeli consulate were safe and did not appear to be in any danger during the incident. he added that at this point there is no credible threat against the building, the israeli consulate or its staff, jessica. >> thanks so much. still to come, former president donald trump and ron desantis both hittinthe campaign trail in iowa today. our team is there and we will take you there next. you're probably not easily persuaded to switch mobile providers for your business. but what if we told you it's possible that comcast business mobile can save you up to 75% a year on your wireless bill versus the big three carriers? it's true. plus when you buy your first line of mobile, you get a second line free. there are no term contracts or line activation fees. and you can bring your own device. oh, and all on the most reliable 5g mobile network nationwide. wireless that works for you. it's not just possible, it's happening. countdown to the iowa caucuses, with both former president donald trump and governor ron desantis holding duelling campaign events in the state today, but with different objectives. iowa serves as the republican party's first presidential nominating contest. it's a spot that can often launch or even end a campaign. cnn's steve contorno is following the desantis campaign, kristen holmes is with the former president. what are you hearing both from the president and his campaign today, and also voters? >> reporter: jessica, what i'm hearing from the president's team is that they are feeling an increased level of confidence. donald trump has been leading in the polls in the gop primary for quite some time, but now, with roughly six months to go until the iowa caucus, i am hearing them start to embrace those numbers. senior advisers say that iowa could be a wild card, but we are expecting to hear donald trump really taking that confidence and pivoting to a general election. we are told by a senior trump adviser he's going to be focused on attacking president joe biden, and this really is just the latest signal of a pivot to the general election. trump's team just launched a six figure ad here in iowa, a television ad, and one of the ads focuses almost exclusively on attacks on p president. now, donald trump's criticisms come at the same time that president biden seems to be ramping up his criticisms of donald trump. both of them looking at these poll numbers clearly, and looking toward a general election. last week, trump started this renewed interest in overturning obamacare, something that democrats seized on. the biden campaign seizing on that and releasing an ad, as the affordable care act has grown more popular. even though donald trump is looking at the general election and planning on attacking president biden, i just listened to him speak across the state, and that speech was focused on mostly iowa governor kim reynolds, and he has not gotten over that she enforced ron desantis here in iowa. >> let's go now to steve contorno, with ron desantis, who now completes the the full grass, he's visited all 99 iowa counties. it's a big deal for that campaign that's going all in on iowa, at least that is the place where it can launch desantis forward as not only the trump alternative, but the candidate to watch who can win the nomination. what are you hearing from his team as they cross this 99 county threshold? >> reporter: well, jessica, right now we're hearing a lot of credence clearwater revival because the event is about to get started. we're at a venue called the thunder dome, which is perhaps a fitting place for a candidate in the fight for his political life. they're setting up for what is going to be his 99th county visit. this is something they've been embarking on for months now, trying to blanket the state with appearances, hoping to generate some momentum for this candidate. but his support in this state has not really moved very much since this 99 county tour began. he's still well behind former president donald trump, he's now also facing competing pressure from former south carolina governor nikki haley. so it's additional competition for him in the state that is just going to complicate the math for him. but his campaign tells me they have not only done a lot of appearances here, but they are doing the work of building out a large ground campaign. here are some of the stats they have been pushing out in the last couple of days. they have 41 endorsements from state lawmakers, they have 120 county-level chairs. he has the support of 100 faith leaders and 26 iowa sheriffs and 30,000 iowans have committed to caucus for him. this is what they have built and what they're banking on. they still need to get some momentum going into the final states, and wondering if now is the chance to catch a spark before the final six weeks of the iowa caucuses. >> steve contorno and kristen holmes, the countdown is on. january 15th is when the iowa caucuses will happen. thank you so much for that reporting. meanwhile, florida governor and 2024 republican presidential candidate ron desantis taking the stage in a prime time debate against someone not running for president. california governor gavin newsom. things got messy as they went toe to toe on issues like president biden's age, immigration, and even human waste. >> yes, he's in decline, yes, it's a danger to the country. he has no business running for president. and gavin newsom agrees with that. he won't say that but that's why he's running a shadow campaign. he should not be running, he is not up to the job, and it is dangerous for this country. >> i'll take joe biden at 100 versus ron desantis any day of the week. i think the asylum system is broken. >> i understand that. >> i'm the only guy here that's the border state governor. you're trolling folks and trying to find migrants to play political games and get news and attention so you can out-trump trump. by the way, how is that going for you, ron? you're down 41 points in your own home state. >> you have the freedom to defecate in public in florida. there's a san francisco map. this is an app where they plot the human feces that are found on the streets of san francisco. and you see how almost the whole thing is covered, because that is what has happened in one of the previous greatest cities this country has ever had. human feces is now a fact of life. >> there's one thing in closing that we have in common, is neither of us will be the nominee for our party in 2024. >> all right, so now that we've seen all of those highlights, we have cnn senior political analyst and senior editor at "the atlantic," brron brownstei back with us. this was dubbed the red versus blue state debate, but, really, it was a look ahead to what we could see in the future. gavin newsom definitely looks like he would love to run for president at some point. what did you make of this whole thing even happening? >> yeah, it was unusual. in the '88 campaign there were a couple of these cross-party debates. i remember kemp debated dick gebhart, but this is an unusual thing to do. and it was trying to serve multiple purposes and they kind of collided at various points. certainly between the moderator, sean hannity, and dlron desanti you got a strong preview of some of the arguments that republicans are going to make against president biden, in many ways that was the weakest moment for newsom in responding to some of those. it gives you an idea of the challenge democrats are going to have and developing arguments about his record about crime and immigration and prices. to me, the two big takeaways were, first, just the enormous gulf that we are living through, the way red states and blue states are separating on virtually every issue. there were times in our history, obviously jim crow segregation and before the civil war, between slavery and free states, where there was a single issue that divided the states maybe more profoundly. but what you saw last thursday was the breadth of the separation that we are living through on economic, health care and social issues between red states and blue states. and just the fundamental centrifugal force of modern american politics. and the other thing was just how hard it is for democrats to penetrate that red state bubble. i interviewed newsom before the debate and he said his principal goal was not so much to rebut or counter desantis, it was to make the case for biden and democratic governance to the fox red state audience. he really never got a chance to do that because sean hannity cherry-picked over and over again data points that make california look as bad as possible, while ignoring all of the comparisons that make california look better than florida. so in many ways it was a tag team two-on-one, in which hannity was trying to present this in a comfortable frame for his audience that red states are thriving and blue states are chaotic hell holes. >> it is striking how people get stuck in where they are and that is all they see and breaking through that is very hard. what does this do for florida governor ron desantis, who we just saw he's in iowa, we've been talking he's in all 99 counties. he's trying to run for president. does this help him in any way make the case with persuadable voters out there who at this point would be republicans, because we're in a primary? do you think this was a good use of his time? >> i actually do. i think it allowed him to kind of show republican voters what kind of general election nominee he would be in terms of making the case against biden and against democratic governance. whether any of that is enough to reverse the kind of downward trajectory of his campaign in the last few months is another question. but i don't think this was crazy for either of them. i think for newsom it showed democrats that he was willing to go into the lion's den and make the case for democratic governance and make the case for biden. he certainly stored up some goodwill for 2028 if he's running, and it continues what he's been doing in terms of trying to make the case in red states. desantis' real problem is that he's chosen a strategy that has been proven to be insufficient in the past. he's basically following in the tracks of mike huckabee, rick santorum and ted cruise, all of whom put all of their chips on iowa, focused overwhelmingly on mobilizing, consolidating the large evangelical population, and then struggled after they won iowa to win voters beyond that base and the republican coalition, all of them kind of careened off the track immediately in new hampshire, and desantis faces that same risk, which may be more magnified because it's going to be difficult to win iowa. >> right. even getting over that hurdle is really hard. ron brownstein, thank you so much. we appreciate it. coming up, a look at one of the most shocking true crime stories you've probably never heard of. how three masked men boarded a school bus in chowchilla, california, and kidnapped the driver and all children aboard in 1976. since october 7th, there's been a sharp increase in the anti-semitic incidents here in america and across the world. rabbi barry silver is the founder of what he calls cosmic judaism with science and religion. he's joining us now. thank you so much for coming on and making time. rabbi, i know so many jewish americans are afraid right now, afraid for themselves, especially their children, some people feel kind of this hopelessness. what has been your message to people in this moment? >> well, thank you for having me on. my message is that there's a phrase in french, which means that at the darkest hour there is born the greatest light. in fact, every light jews are reminded of that because the day starts in the evening and it's always followed by the dawn of a new day. my message is this, it is dark right now, but this is an opportune time, perhaps the best time to make peace. in 1973, israel faced an existential threat with the yom kippur war, attacked by egypt and others. and before the year was out, peace was established with egypt. the united states dropped two atomic bombs on japan in world war ii, and almost overnight japan became our closest allies, as did germany, who fought bitterly against us. my message is this, this is the opportune time for us to make peace because we can see clearly that warfare is conflict is not working. this is a disaster for jews, palestinians and everyone else. our heart breaks for palestinians who are under the yoke of hamas. hamas in hebrew means violence, in spanish hamas means never, and never again should jews be barbarically slaughtered without a response. our response is not just to save israel, our response is to protect the palestinians from being run and governed by a terrorist group, by hamas. >> and, rabbi, i believe you're battling cancer right now. that's right? >> yes. >> and you've recently written about -- we hope you're doing all right. i'm sorry you're having to go through that. you recently wrote about the lessons you're learning both from your treatments, and you feel like they can be extrapolated into this moment in time. what is it you've learned? >> well, i do try to find lessons in whatever life throws at me, and i'm fortunate to have a strong support staff and family, friends and the congregation. my lesson from cancer is this, you can fight cancer in the old days with chemotherapy. that obliterates everything in sight, healthy, unhealthy, and it destroys the cancer, as well as healthy cells. we've now come up with a better treatment called immunotherapy, which fortunately i'm on. what that does is targets the cancer so that it spares healthy cells. what's going on in gaza now is kind of like chemotherapy. israel is obliterated everything in sight. do they have the right to do it? yes. is it the right way to do it? i don't think so. i think what we should do is seek out those forces for peace within palestinian society and declare tomorrow the existence of a palestinian state, on the west bank, once they respect and acknowledge israel's right to exist, and then take out hamas surgically, nand i think the people of gaza will see there's hope, there's a way. make peace with israel and your future will be bright. elect a terrorist to represent you, and there will be more death and destruction. >> rabbi barry silver, thank you so much for joining us. we appreciate it. >> thank you for your time. my pleasure. and coming up this sunday, we are bringing you the all new cnn film "chowchilla," which tells one of the shocking true crime stories you probably never heard about. it follows the 1976 kidnapping of a school bus full of children and their driver, who were buried underground for more than 12 hours before they orchestrated their own dramatic escape. the incident captivated the nation at the time and became a turning point in our understanding and treatment of childhood trauma. cnn chief medical correspondent dr. sanjay gupta has more, and we do want to warn you, you may find some of the following images disturbing. >> we're trying to locate 26 lost children along with their driver. >> reporter: this is a story that stopped the nation dead in its tracks. july 1976, a bus full of children on their way home from summer school, held at gunpoint by three masked men. forced into a trailer and then buried underground. the kidnappers hoping to be paid a huge ransom. >> the bus has been found, there are no signs of violence and there are only horrified guesses as to what may have happened. >> reporter: ultimately, after 28 hours, somehow they managed to escape, and authorities were quick to say there was, quote, no indication of harm. that was something child psychiatrist, dr. la terr, did not believe. >> the kids were not okay. a psychiatrist came to town and made a prediction. he said one kid in this 26 is going to have a problem. but what happened was that no parent wanted to admit that his kid was the one in 26. by the time i got out there, 100% of those kids were having problems. >> well, there was no diagnosis of posttraumatic stress disorder in 1976. it not only didn't exist for children, it didn't exist for adults, either. there was no protocol, there was no way that we knew how to respond after this event at that time. >> reporter: they did what they thought was best, send the kids on a trip to disneyland, never speak about it again, and just allow those children to move on with their lives. it didn't work. >> the trip to disneyland was an intrusion into the nightmare. that's all it was. >> the children are resilient. they will forget. best not to bring it up, because that could cause harm. that seemed to be the thinking, right? >> i think that there was the wish that children would recover, forget about the event, and go on with their lives as though it never happened. >> reporter: even when the kidnappers were caught, there were court hearings and they continued to bring up this question of harm. >> there is very little physical damage at all, and, frankly, it's nonexistent. >> there is no physical harm here, that was their case. can we say definitively that emotional trauma causes physical harm? >> well, i think it causes brain changes, which in the brain is a physical object, so in that regard, i would have to say, yes. but i think the most important issue is that the psychological, emotional harm is robust, it's life altering, and it is of a magnitude comparable to a physical harm. >> reporter: life altering, which is exactly what dr. terr found after studying the children of chowchilla for five years, and it was her work that paved the way to accepting that childhood trauma was real and it produced long-lasting effects. >> from a scientific standpoint, it was a landmark event, and now we know how to assess them, diagnose them, and offer them treatment, and the chowchilla work of lenore terr, and then subsequent work by others, has established child ptsd as legitimate. >> reporter: but for terr, the children of chowchilla are the ones who made the biggest impact. >> they paved the way for us to understand more contemporary things, what happens when you force children away from their parents at a border, what happens to children at some of these horrible school shootings. >> because of the chowchilla kidnapping, there were counselors at columbine after the shooting. there are counselors at nightclubs after shootings. >> chowchilla children are heroes, and they continue to teach us what childhood trauma is 46, 47, 48, 50 years after the fact. >> reporter: dr. sanjay gupta, cnn reporting. >> be sure to tune in, the all new cnn film "chowchilla" premieres sunday at 9:00 p.m. only on cnn. it was a sight to see last night as a strong gio magnetic storm amplified the northern lights. this is incredible video. it captured a beautiful display of the aurora borealis in north dakota. all thanks to the strong level three storm. the space weather prediction center says events like these can brighten the northern lights visibility as far south as pennsylvania, iowa, and also all the way to oregon. but can disrupt radio signals and gps systems. so, if you were lost in the stars last night, you now know why. major cities across the northeast are seeing a record-breaking snow drought this winter. new york, philadelphia, d.c., they've not seen a single inch of snow in more than 600 days. here to discuss our snowless forecast for this part of the country is cnn emergency elise is a rafa. what is going on here? >> this is incredible. new york hasn't had a blockbuster storm in almost two years. 656 consecutive days since new york city has seen more than an inch of snow. the previous record was 383 days, so, not only did we break the old record, but we're totally obliterating it. the last time new york city saw more than one inch of snow was back in february of 2022. so, again, just incredible records here. and it's not just new york. we looked in the record books. philadelphia, washington, d.c., baltimore, all with the top spot for the longest stretch without more than an inch of snow. richmond rounds out the top five. again, all with way more than 600 days since they've seen some significant snow. looking at new york, looking at a stretch where they're not going to really see too much snow at all. rain going into sunday. temperatures below average, but not meeting up with any storms for snow. where we will get the white stuff, that's up in the pacific northwest. all the pinks that you see here are winter storm warnings in effect for the cascades, some of the high elevations going to salt lake city and denver. we have snow showers that have been pumping all day, not only with some heavy rain and snow, but with some 50-mile-per-hour gusts. an atmospheric river is going to set up, continue to dump moisture through the next couple of days. this could be hazardous, talking about river rises and mudslides, as well. rain could be up to ten inches in spots. snow, two to three feet. >> they're getting it out there. all right, elisa, thank you for walking us through that. and i want to thank you for joining me today. i'm jessica dean. "cnn newsroom" continues with jim acosta after a short break.

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