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New Day

President Obama's Historic Trip To Cuba; Protester Punched At Trump Rally In Arizona; Trump Blames Protesters For Inciting Violence; Clinton And Sanders Campaign In Western States; Obama Talks About Rebuilding Ties Between Cuba And U.S.; Dozens Of Dissidents Arrested Ahead Of Obama's Visit; Retired Trooper Suspected In Deadly Turnpike Murders; Marine's Death Reveals First U.S. Firebase In Iraq; Obama To Meet With Cuban Dissidents On Tuesday. Aired 7-7:30a ET

Aired March 21, 2016 - 07:00   ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


[07:00:00] CHRIS CUOMO, CNN ANCHOR: We are here live in Havana because history was made in Cuba when President Obama touched down on Cuban soil.

The word is never. This has never happened since the revolution here and many generations believe that it never would. Today, more history will be made you'll have President Obama addressing Cubans directly. What will he call upon this communist government to do, especially where human rights are involved?

We're going to break down what the pluses and the minuses are of this trip. It's just one part of what is a very big news day, Alisyn.

ALISYN CAMEROTA, CNN ANCHOR: All right, Chris, thanks so much. We'll check back with you momentarily because there's also chaos and controversy to tell you about at Donald Trump events. More violent clashes involving protesters of his camp rallies and again, his campaign manager plays a role.

Trump sits down with party officials today as the five remaining presidential hopefuls make their final pitch to voters ahead of tomorrow's western primary.

So, let's begin with CNN's Sunlen Serfaty, she is live in Washington for us. Hi Sunlen.

SUNLEN SERFATY, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Good morning to you, Alisyn.

Yes, its right, the Republicans are heading into a big Election Day tomorrow, they have key contest in Arizona and in Utah. But for Donald Trump, a lot of the focus for him is having to explain this violence that continues to break out at his rallies.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

DONALD TRUMP, PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: Again, I say it for everybody, especially to the media, we don't condone violence.

SERFATY: Donald Trump once again on the defensive.

TRUMP: How come we're the bad people all the time?

SERFATY: As raucous clashes continue to overshadow the frontrunner's campaign events

TRUMP: The one who's dragging the flag and has no respect for the flag whatsoever. And his partner, whoever that maybe, has a Ku Klux Klan hat on. And you had an African-American man got incensed and he started hitting the people.

SERFATY: At a dinner in Sunday, the Republican frontrunner trying to explain chaos at his rally on Saturday night.

TRUMP: Get him out of here.

SERFATY: While being escorted out, this protester caught on camera getting sucker-punched then tackled and repeatedly punched and kicked by a Trump supporter who was arrested and charged with assault.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: What just happened to me inside this place is a direct result of Trump's methods, his lies, and angry rhetoric, violent rhetoric that he is displaying at his campaign.

SERFATY: A woman behind him also being escorted out wearing a KKK hoodie, but unlike in Trump's version of events, the two don't know each other. And Trump's campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski in a verbal confrontation with another protester seen in this CNN video yanking the men's shirt collar as a member of Trump's security detail grabs him from behind.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: I give him credit for having spared. He wanted them to take down this horrible profanity-laced signs.

SERFATY: Trump's competition seizing on the continued violence in his statement last week that his supporters might riot if he is denied the

nomination in a contested convention.

SEN. TED CRUZ, R, PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: Donald Trump continues that path of spreading hatred, spreading division, and it's fundamentally wrong.

GOV. JOHN KASICH, R, PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: I don't think that kind of language is appropriate to talk about violence and rioting and if you go to a convention and you lose, be a big enough person to say I gave it my best and I didn't win.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

SERFATY: And today Donald Trump will be here in Washington D.C. he is set to hold a big meeting with top Republican lawmakers trying to soothe over relations a little bit and he will speak tonight at the Pro-Israel APAC Conference. This is already lining up to be a controversial event for him. A group of rabbis are planning to boycott his speech, Alisyn, planning to walk out in protest.

CAMEROTA: There's a lot of controversial events we've seen including the weekend. Sunlen, thank you for that. Let's talk about all of it. Joining us now is Ron Nehring, he's a national spokesman for Ted Cruz and Jeffrey Lord, CNN's political commentator, and former Reagan White House political director, he supports Donald Trump. Gentlemen, thanks so much for being here on New Day.

JEFFREY LORD, DONALD TRUMP SUPPORTER: Good morning Ali.

CAMEROTA: Jeffrey, I want to start with you, this is not -- what happened over the weekend is being described as the most violent confrontation yet between a protester and a Trump supporter. The -- One of the protesters was punched and kicked. When you see a pattern like this, Jeffrey, as we have now, is it fair to say that this is sort of part of a campaign culture now with Donald Trump?

LORD: Ali, I protest this morning before I come on the air on right part there is a link through a video by an attendee at one -- at the rally in Tucson. The attendee describes himself as a Tucson police man who was off duty and wanted to attend the rally out of curiosity. He also happens to be an African-American. And what he describes in that video are protesters deliberately, deliberately provoking violence.

CAMEROTA: How?

LORD: And he goes into great detail about this, Ali. And as you know, I have said in the past, this is what the America what does (ph) and has been doing for decades.

[07:05:00] CAMEROTA: Yes.

LORD: So, I really do think that either there is no excuse for violence and this gentleman also said that the rally began with a direct instruction to people, the Trump supporters, not to respond to when provoked. So, as you know, and they have to do with the best they can.

CAMEROTA: A direct reflection from whom, from Donald Trump? But from Donald Trump saying don't respond ...

LORD: I'm sorry.

CAMEROTA: Was Donald Trump the person saying don't respond if provoked?

LORD: No. Just somebody comes out at the beginning of the rally and says, "Please don't respond." I heard Donald Trump say that myself.

CAMEROTA: OK.

LORD: So, I mean, I don't understand what the problem is.

CAMEROTA: Well, part of the problem is that we've also heard Donald Trump say this people should be punished, this people should go out on a stretcher, they're free to -- if they have a tomato, to punch them in the face. Ron, let me ask you, are -- is violence like this erupting at Ted Cruz events?

RON NEHRING, TED CRUZ'S NATIONAL SPOKESPERSON: No. We haven't seen events, you know, like this at all.

Look, this radical left wing protesters are going to show up, you know, wherever there's a television camera, that's for sure. But at the same time, let's not mince words here, Donald Trump does not exactly raised the bar, raised the standard of dialogue in his campaign for the presidency. In fact, he has dragged into the standard in this campaign down into the gutter and that's very, very unfortunate because the Republican party and the United States are better than that.

And when Ted Cruz is the Republican nominee, we're sure that there are left wing protesters who will show up, but the difference between Ted Cruz and Donald Trump is that Ted Cruz will continue to raise the bar, raise the standard of the dialogue in this campaign, and then move on to confront Hillary Clinton in November. There's of course a big difference between Ted Cruz's approach, which is focused on issues and Donald Trump's approach, which is focused on these, you know, personal insults and really dragging the dialogue of this campaign down into the gutter.

CAMEROTA: OK. So, Jeffrey how do you explain this? How do you explain that there are protesters at Ted Cruz's events as there has been at everybody's events but somehow it doesn't erupt into violence the way it does at Donald Trump's?

LORD: Because Senator Cruz or Vice President Cruz as I'd like to refer to him has not yet become the frontrunner. He is the number two guy. But let me assure you, that if in fact he were to become the frontrunner, this is exactly what would go on, he's already being attacked by CARE as some sort of a bigot because he hired Frank Gaffney, for heaven's sakes.

So, I mean, this is business what goes on and rest assured, frankly, if the nominee became John Kasich, they would do this. They did this to Mitt Romney, they did this to John McCain.

CAMEROTA: Well, look they go in protest, hey Jeffrey, I mean you're right. There's always protesters, it's the violence that's difference. Ron, do you accept that premise, that if Ted Cruz becomes the frontrunner we would see violence at his events? Or do you think there is something particular going on at the Donald Trump events?

NEHRING: Well, I think that when Ted Cruz is the Republican nominee following the convention, there'll be protesters who show up and because there are television cameras there. And what the protesters are looking for is attention from the media who are present there. That's clear.

But one thing that's also clear is that Ted Cruz is not going to adopt the rhetoric of Donald Trump and bring the campaign again down into the gutter with the persona insults and so on. He's going to keep it focused on the policy, differences in the challenges that the country faces. And that's also important for the party because at the end of the day, once we have a Republican nominee, we have to bring this party and this country back together.

And it's really hard to do that when the dialogue has been dragged down into gutter the way Donald Trump has done that with all of the, you know, terminology that he uses and the personal insults and his overreaction to things and obsession with, you know, Fox News reporters and so on and on forth. It's much harder to bring this back together after you've done that. And that's why with Ted Cruz the Republican nominee, this party and this country are going to be able to come back together.

CAMEROTA: Jeffrey, Donald Trump has said he does not condone violence. He said it over and over again. Yet, when protesters are hurt, he doesn't seem to have much sympathy for them. So let me play for you what he did yesterday about this incident.

(BEGIN AUDIO CLIP)

TRUMP: These are professional agitators. And I think that somebody should say that when a road is blocked going into the event, so that people have to wait sometimes hours to get in, I think that's very fair and they should be blamed there too. When signs are put up, lifted up with tremendous profanity on them, I mean the worst profanity and you have television cameras all over the place and people see these signs, I think, maybe those people have some blame and should suffer some blame also.

(END AUDIO CLIP)

CAMEROTA: So, Jeffrey, let's all just agree that protesters blocking free speech is not what we're after. Do you think its incumbent upon Donald Trump to just use stronger language and say no -- no one hit anyone. No one punch anyone. Something like that.

LORD: Well, you know, he can say it or not. It isn't going to make any difference, that's my point. This kind of thing is going to go on and on. And, you know, let me just something about that video with Corey Lewandowski, I looked at that thing over 20 times since this thing has become public and when you do it, you do it frame by frame, it's very interesting what's not being said, the protester that is yanked back eventually by the Trump security guard ...

CAMEROTA: And by Corey Lewandowski right there, there's his hand Jeffrey, he grabs the collar of his shirt and he pulls him around for security.

[07:10:00] LORD: Alisyn, I can't see a person in this setting, but if you look at the woman in front of the protester in the green jersey and watch the protester's hand go on the woman's arm and yanked her and she responds at that point, the protester is then yanked back.

In other words, that protester committed assault right there and we're not talking about it.

CAMEROTA: I'm looking, Jeffrey, I'm watching. I'm trying to find the protester committing assault before he's grabbed by Corey Lewandowski.

LORD: Watch it (inaudible).

CAMEROTA: Look, Jeffrey.

LORD: Watch his hands around the woman.

CAMEROTA: I'm trying. But Jeffrey, I think the point what is the campaign manager doing down in the crowd with protesters. Since when is that the role of the campaign manager?

LORD: I don't know exactly where that was. Was that behind Donald Trump? I mean, I all I see is the people. I don't know, you know, where ...

CAMEROTA: But I mean it's in the crown, but why is Corey Lewandowski going down and taking part in these melees.

LORD: I honestly don't know, Ali. I do not know.

CAMEROTA: All right. Jeffrey, Ron, thank you very much. Nice to see both of you this morning, we appreciate you being on to be with us.

LORD: Thank you.

CAMEROTA: (inaudible).

MICHAELA PEREIRA: All right, to democrats now. Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders making big last minute campaign pushes in western states ahead of the big contest tomorrow. CNN senior political correspondent Brianna Keilar is live in Washington, hey Brianna.

BRIANNA KEILAR, CNN SENIOR POLITICAL CORRESPONDENT: Hi there. Yes, we're actually here ahead of the big pro-Israel lobby conference for APAC. They were expecting Hillary Clinton to be speaking up first among these presidential candidates in the 9:00 hour.

But a big push this week and over the weekend in these western states, you have Idaho and Arizona, Utah, having contest on Tuesday, this is where Bernie Sanders thinks he really has the advantage over Hillary Clinton, the word meaning he has been at a disadvantage with one voting block in his speech yesterday in Washington state.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

SEN. BERNIE SANDERS, D, PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: If I can make a political statement here's interesting, as we go along this campaign, we are not doing well. We're working on it, I can't tell you why, we are not doing with all the people. But we are doing phenomenally well with younger people.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

KEILAR: So he's admitting that issue that he's been having now here at the APAC conference. As I said we're expecting Hillary Clinton to speak as well as other presidential candidates on the Republican side. Bernie Sanders will be the only candidate to not attend this conference, wanting to spend his time concentrating on the western states. Instead, he'll give a foreign policy speech in Utah. When you look at what we're hearing Michaela, about what Hillary Clinton is going to say, we understand from a campaign official that she is going to be taking on Donald Trump, essentially pinning him as unfit when it comes to foreign policy. This campaign official saying she'll make the case for a commander in chief having a steady hand and also that the U.S. must never be neutral in defending Israel, that's a direct rhetoric to Donald Trump's comments recently indicating that he would be or might be neutral in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Michaela.

PEREIRA: All right, Brianna, thank you so much for that.

So on the eve of tomorrow's western Tuesday contest, all five presidential hopefuls will sit down with CNN's Anderson Cooper and Wolf Blitzer, you can see that starting tonight at 8:00 Eastern right here on CNN.

CAMEROTA: Fantastic. All right, let's get back to Chris in Havana, Cuba, Chris.

CUOMO: Boy, I got to tell you what an amazing event that's going to be tonight and so different than the political reality here in Cuba. The United States are going to have people from different parties and different points of view talking here it's just about one and what happens to those voices when they descent? The word is nothing good.

So, now things are supposed to change. This was history, President Obama coming here. What will it really mean? There's a big meeting today between Raul Castro, the leader of the regime here and President Barack Obama. What will they talk about in terms of human rights? What will they avoid? That's the context of this trip. Here is a look at how we got here.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

CUOMO: Many here in Cuba thought they would never see this. Air Force One touching down at Havana's airport Sunday, President Barack Obama becoming the first siting U.S. president to set foot on Cuban soil since the revolution, this historic visit rich with symbolism and filled with high expectations.

The President meeting with staff members of the recently reopened U.S. Embassy at a nearby hotel.

BARACK OBAMA, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: It is wonderful to be here. Back in 1928 President Coolidge came on a battleship. It took him three days to get here. It only took me three hours.

CUOMO: The President talking about accelerating the engagement between both nations after decades of hostility.

OBAMA: Everything we've accomplished so far, more Americans coming to Cuba, more engagement with the Cuban people, civil society, faith groups, entrepreneurs, students, young people, more opportunities for the Cuban people to improve their lives. It's all happening because of you.

[07:15:02] CUOMO: Just hours before President Obama arrived in Cuba, government authorities here arrested dozens of dissidents, protesting for improved human rights.

Members of the group known as The Ladies in White were quickly rounded up and taken away. They demonstrate every Sunday against the Castro regime and its atrocious human rights record. The rain did not stop the first family from touring the city's historic districts. Cubans gathering on dampened streets, hoping to catch a glimpse of history.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

PEREIRA: The inclement weather there, Chris, are you back with us now?

CUOMO: Yes, I hear you Mich. The wind is really howling here. You should see the size of the guys we have trying to hold the tent in place. The metaphor we've been using is hopefully this is the wind of change blowing. But, you see, the last scene there, the Damas de Blancas, the Women in White, they are known protesters here but they were doing something different yesterday. They had palms with them, you see that, it was Palm Sunday.

They were invoking that, you know, hey, this is about Jesus' message. This is about doing right thing. This is about being the right things and they were still arrested. Despite the headlines in the newspaper this morning, Alisyn, you know, many people thought they'd never see this. This is Granma, one of the state-run newspapers here. To see President Obama here means something to the Cuban people, but right next to it, a story about the blockade being the whole problem. That's the tension here. We still don't know what's going to change that will make life better for Cuban people, but today is a big day.

CAMEROTA: There you go. Chris has been showing us all the juxtapositions all morning long and we'll check that with you, Chris shortly.

But we do have a bizarre and deadly scene to tell you about that unfolded on the Pennsylvania Turnpike. Officials say a retired state trooper killed a toll collector and a security guard during a hold up of a toll booth. The police shot and killed the trooper minutes later in a gun battle. The trooper retired in 2012 after 26 years on the force. The Pennsylvania State Police now re-evaluating security at toll booths.

PEREIRA: We are alerting now that the U.S. marine killed in an ISIS rocket attack was at the first American firebase in Iraq. The previously unknown base to become operational just a few days earlier.

Barbara Starr is live in the Pentagon with more for us. Good morning Barbara

BARBARA STARR, CNN PENTAGON CORRESPONDENT: Good morning, Michaela.

Staff Sergeant Louis Cardin of Temecula, California killed over the weekend when ISIS attacked that firebase in iraq with rocket fire. The location very interesting, Makhmour, Iraq. This is northern Iraq and Makmour is so important to the U.S. because it is basically in the road to Mosul, Iraq's second largest city. The city that the U.S.'s placed a real priority on getting ISIS boobied out of there.

Now, the firebase is to support, we are told, Iraqi troops as they begin their march towards Mosul in the coming weeks and months. This is going to be very different for the U.S. The firebase hadn't even been acknowledged because it had only been operational a few days and there was concern about the vulnerability of the marines' position there. They wanted to get everybody in, get the whole thing up and running. But now if these marines indeed are going to use their artillery to provide cover fire, if you will, as Iraqi forces go forward towards Mosul, this will be a new and different combat mission for the U.S. forces there, Alisyn.

CAMEROTA: OK, Barbara thanks so much for sharing your reporting on that.

All right, now to my kid's favorite story. Congratulations are in order for Mr. President and the first lady. We mean the bald eagles, not the Obamas. A web camera attached to this nest at the National Arboretum in Washington captures the moment their second eaglet hatched, Sunday. Its older sibling hatched two days earlier.

Their names actually DC2 and DC3, that's not very creative.

PREIRA: Well, at least for now I think they might be having a concept who knows a fill of a content to pick up better names, DC2 and DC3 though.

CAMEROTA: OK. How cute those little fuzzy...

PREIRA: Adorable and fluffy.

All right, back to our top story, the President's historic trip to Cuba prompting mixed reactions on Capitol Hill. Only a few Republicans backing the party trend to support the move. He is along for the President's trip and we're talking with Arizona senator, Jeff Flake, next.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

[07:23:22] CUOMO: Welcome back to Nuevo Dio, New Day live in Havana where the winds of change are blowing here. At least the wind is blowing, that's for sure.

I want to bring Arizona Senator, Republican Senator Jeff Flake here. And Senator it's great to be here. We know that you're here for Rolling Stones, you follow them around the world. You are no stranger to Cuba. You've been here more than a dozen tiles.

SEN. JEFF FLAKE, R: Yes.

CUOMO: Party lines did not matter to you on this trip, you said you were coming, why? FLAKE: That's important, I think that these moves have been great for

the Cuban people, they're great for Americans as well. We have to remember the sanctions that we've had are really on Americans, not Cubans. And so the ability to travel and do business here in Cuba, that's something that we ought to have the right to do and it happens to be what is very good for the Cuban people.

CUOMO: Now, you touched on what the big issue is here. They give for the U.S. as the President comes, you come. They'll release some of the attentions of the embargo, but what do you get back in terms of human rights, President Obama spoke to that right after you guys touched down and brought all this bad weather with you.

Here's what the President had to say.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

OBAMA: Change wasn't going to happen overnight. But what we have already seen is the reopening of the embassy. And although we still have significant differences around human rights and individual liberties inside of Cuba, we felt that coming now would maximize our ability to prompt more change.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

CUOMO: Do you agree with what the President is saying there? Do you believe that by coming you help, as opposed to rewarding the regime?

FLAKE: I do. And I think what the President should be talking about as well is the changes that have happened ever since 2009 when the President lifted restrictions on Cuban-American travel and lifted caps on remittances.

[07:25:08] What that did was allowed capital to come and fund a lot of small businesses. Now you have about 25 percent of the Cuban workforce is in the private sector here and there are human rights condition has improved significantly because there's propaganda going both ways. The remittances, on travel. What that did is allow capital to fund a lot of businesses. Their human rights condition has improved significantly.

CUOMO: Now you know that there's propaganda going both ways, the remittances, some numbers go as high as in to the billions, $3 billion, $4 billion. But where did it go? The speculation is, well did it go to the Castros, you know. And is -- are things better or are they actually worse now because the regie wants to show that it's grip is tight.

What do you believe is false propaganda, what is real?

FLAKE: What is real is that 25 percent of the Cuban people now work in the private sector and are less reliant on government. And so when you're less reliant on government, then your human rights condition improves significantly.

When the party comes to people and say, hey, you have to attend this rally, if you're employed in the private sector you're not (inaudible) as much as you would be otherwise. And so the, you know, economic case is really the human rights case as well in many ways. So I would say that the human rights condition has improved significantly despite what the government continues to do on that front, detaining people and harassing The Ladies in White, that will still go on. But for a number of Cubans or the majority of Cubans, the situation is better and will improve significantly as more Americans come here and business is better.

CUOMO: The pendulum swings back and forth, you know, Damas de Blancas, The Women in White, they were arrested at the President, that's an ugly symbol of the reality here. But then others who say that President was right to come say, "Yes, but there are a lot of places around the world where this happens and the U.S. doesn't shut them out that only makes the situation worse."

Then you have Maduro from Venezuela coming here right ahead with the President, meeting with Fidel Castro. You know the sign very evident here of what they are trying to do, Cuba obviously embracing that. Raul Castro not meeting you guys when you got off the plane yesterday, what do you take in terms of the seriousness of the regime of respecting this dynamic of change?

FLAKE: Well, the regime obviously wants to maintain control. They are very concerned about the influence that comes with American travel, American money, and American influence. And so they will obviously try to maintain control that I would say that it's simply impossible for them to do that when more Americans come and one business is done and so the situation improves.

But obviously, we'd expect the regime to do exactly what they're doing. They want to show that they are in control. They look around Havana today, you know, they shut down most the roads and things are not as they usually are down here. But ...

CUOMO: A little bit cleaner.

FLAKE: Yes. The road from the airport was a lot different than I've experienced in the past.

CUOMO: Yes. And look, few people know it in the government the way you do. You've been committed to this for a long time.

Now, you're here as a representative of the United States Senate of the country and also of your party, swerte, as they're going to tell you down here. The talk in the election is talked down here.

FLAKE: Right.

CUOMO: You know like, you at you guys you want to come down here and lecture us about how we cheat our people. Look how you're talking about, you know, your Republican candidates, they're really talking about Trump mostly. As he talks about outsiders and the xenophobia and the ugliness and the violence, I mean, you know, Cuba doesn't have any high ground when it comes to their regime, but how do you deal with the ugliness of the election there when you're coming here as an ambassador doing things a better way.

FLAKE: So, there's no comparison ...

CUOMO: There's no comparison, I love you on that.

FLAKE: None at all. But -- And please don't ask me to speak for Mr. Trump.

CUOMO: He is your boy. He's in your party.

FLAKE: We've got a long way to go before the election (inaudible).

CUOMO: But do you think that it's important that the tone is consistent about being the example that you want others to follow.

FLAKE: No doubt. And I've been very critical of -- particularly to, you know, the Mausam band and the talk about Mexican immigrants and everything else. I don't think that that's good for the country, certainly not good for our party.

So, I share the view that others have that this isn't a good move. That we're not putting our best but forward as a party or a country what some of the rhetoric that we've seen. But we got a long way to go, we'll get there.

CUOMO: Backing up your words with actions. Even though Senator Flake is a Republican he came with the Democrat Barack Obama down here and his delegation, has been here over dozen times, you've been living what you want to see changed here in Cuba, nobody can dispute that.

FLAKE: Right.

CUOMO: Thank you Senator Flake for being with us.

FLAKE: Thanks for having me.

CUOMO: This wind and this rain you've brought. A lot of people aren't happy about it. A lot of people aren't happy about it.

FLAKE: I don't believe it.

CUOMO: We're going to be here and going to continue the coverage. This is a big day.

President Obama will meet with the Cuban leader Raul Castro. They are going to talk about what will come next. You saw the huge baseball game, a cultural exchange that cannot be exaggerated in terms of its significance and then of course the Rolling Stones are coming.

So we're going to take you through all of that. And also we have the latest news for you about what's going on in the U.S. election with Donald Trump. So stay with us.