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Clinton Not Celebrating Nomination Yet; Trump to Surrogates: Keep Criticizing Judge. Aired 6-6:30a ET

Aired June 07, 2016 - 06:00   ET

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


(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

[05:58:11] HILLARY CLINTON (D), PRESUMPTIVE PRESIDENTIAL NOMINEE: We are on the brink of a historic moment.

JOHN BERMAN, CNN ANCHOR: Hillary Clinton is the presumptive Democratic nominee.

SEN. BERNIE SANDERS (D-VT), DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: If the turnout is high, we will win.

CLINTON: We're going to fight hard. We still have work to do.

SANDERS: Let's assess where we are after tomorrow before we make statements based on speculation.

DONALD TRUMP (R), PRESUMPTIVE PRESIDENTIAL NOMINEE: This judge of Mexican heritage. I'm building a wall.

I don't care if the judge is Mexican or not. All I want him to do is give me a fair shake.

NEWT GINGRICH (R), FORMER HOUSE SPEAKER: We're both big guys. I deeply disagree on one item.

SEN. MARCO RUBIO (R), FLORIDA: When I ran for president, I told everyone that this is what would happen.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

ANNOUNCER: This is CNN breaking news.

ALISYN CAMEROTA, CNN ANCHOR: Good morning, everyone. Welcome to your NEW DAY. It's Tuesday, June 7th. Six o'clock in the East.

We do begin with breaking news. Overnight, Hillary Clinton makes history today as she crosses the delegate threshold to clinch the Democratic nomination. Clinton now with a total of 2,384 in pledged and superdelegates.

However, the presumptive nominee is not celebrating just yet. She is waiting for six states to vote today in the final Super Tuesday, including, of course, California and New Jersey. President Obama apparently ready to endorse Hillary Clinton and become the campaigner in chief.

CHRIS CUOMO, CNN ANCHOR: Now, a lot of people are asking, how did this happen? We haven't had the primaries yet. Should picked up delegates out of Puerto Rico and there had been a lot of phone calms made to the super delegates. We'll take you to it all this morning.

But on the other side of the race, Donald Trump has got more pressure on him to walk back his attack on a federal judge's Mexican heritage, but also just the intimidating nature of the tactic. Instead, Trump had a phone call where he said, no, no, no apologies, double down, telling his surrogates to rev up criticism of the judge and, of course, the media.

We have the 2016 covered, the way only CNN.

[06:00:01] Let's begin with Mr. Chris Frates live in L.A. -- Chris.

CHRIS FRATES, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Hey, good morning, Chris.

Well, it's not how Hillary Clinton wanted to make history as the first woman to become the presumptive presidential nominee of a major party, but last night, she clinched the number of delegates need to do just that. So, both Sanders and Clinton didn't really acknowledge the moment, instead urging supporters to get to the polls today.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

CLINTON: According to the news, we are on the brink of a historic, historic, unprecedented moment.

FRATES (voice-over): Overnight, Hillary Clinton clinched enough delegates to become the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee.

CLINTON: We're going to fight hard for every single vote, especially right here in California!

FRATES: But she is not claiming that historic milestone just yet, instead focusing on getting her supporters to the polls in the final states holding contests today.

SANDERS: In case you haven't noticed, there are a lot of people here tonight.

FRATES: Clinton's rival Bernie Sanders is insisting that the primaries aren't over yet arguing that super delegates can change their minds before the July convention. The senator not acknowledging Clinton's rally in San Francisco but softening his rhetoric when asked about the possibility of endorsing her.

SANDERS: Let's assess where we are after tomorrow before we make statements based on speculation.

FRATES: Clinton is hoping to bring Democrats together quickly after this long and bruising primary season.

CLINTON: I'm going to do everything I can to unify the Democratic Party, and I certainly am going to be reaching out to Senator Sanders and hope he will join me in that, because we've got to be unified going into the convention and coming out of the convention.

FRATES: Clinton is poised to get a major boost from President Obama, who sources say could endorse her as early as tomorrow, and is itching to take on Donald Trump.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

FRATES: Now, on Sunday, President Obama and Sanders talked by phone, but Sanders really refused to publicly discuss that call.

And last night, CNN asked Clinton seven times about the news she had become the presumptive nominee, but she declined to answer. So, both candidates really trying to make sure that their voters don't think that this race is over and they get out to the polls today -- Chris.

HAYES: All right. Frates, you're where the action and the money will be later tonight. Keep us apprised of all changes.

Also, the Clinton and Sanders campaign are urging people to come out to vote this final Super Tuesday. They don't like, either side don't like the idea of this being over. Now, California is the big ticket, but New Jersey could be the deciding contest.

CNN's Jessica Schneider live in Bloomfield, New Jersey, where polls have just opened.

What's the status?

JESSICA SCHNEIDER, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Yes, Chris. Like you said, the campaigns are definitely concerned that voter turnout will be dampened. But I tell you this, with 1.1 million new registered voters in just the past six months here in New Jersey, the poll workers here tell me that they are expecting a steady stream of people.

We're just outside Newark, New Jersey, in the town of Bloomfield. There's 30,000 registered voters here, 5.5 million registered voters statewide. Interestingly, that number is 600,000 more registered voters than in the last big primary in 2008.

So, the polls here just opening at 6:00 this morning. They'll be open straight through 8:00 tonight, and the poll workers, they say they are gearing up for what they think will be a lot of people out here -- Chris and Alisyn.

CUOMO: So, they're saying there will be a lot of people, because, you know, looking behind you right now, it's not the most action I've ever seen at a poll location. There's somebody.

SCHNEIDER: Give them a little time, Chris. The polls just opened.

CUOMO: There's somebody else. Forget it. I feel better now.

SCHNEIDER: There you go.

CAMEROTA: All right. There you go.

SCHNEIDER: We got one. We got one.

CAMEROTA: Very good.

All right, Jessica. We'll check back with you. Thank you very much for that.

Let's bring in our stellar panel. We start with CNN political commentator and political anchor of Time Warner Cable News, Errol Louis, CNN political analyst and host of "The David Gregory Show" podcast, David Gregory, and CNN national political reporter Maeve Reston.

David Gregory, great to have you here in studio with us.

DAVID GREGORY, CNN POLITICAL ANALYST: Thank you. Good to be here.

CAMEROTA: So, why isn't Hillary Clinton Trumpeting her big win? Why are they playing this under the rug?

GREGORY: Well, I mean, she wants voters, would like a resounding victory in California for one. Two, I think she wants to give Bernie Sanders some space here. Hearing Senator Sanders yesterday, I think he was modulating a little bit, moderating his idea that this is going to be a contested convention. He wants to see the results in California.

Obviously, if he were to pull off victory there, he would try to make the argument to superdelegates that he would keep going.

But they got a call from President Obama yesterday. The White House through leaks says -- put their thumbs on the scale in a pretty big way, urging him to wind this down and I think there was a different tone yesterday from him yesterday.

CAMEROTA: And we do have that. We have what his tone was before the phone call from President Obama and after.

[06:05:01] So, let's listen to this.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

SANDERS: No candidate will have enough pledged delegates to call the campaign a victory. They will be dependent upon super delegates. In other words, the Democratic National Convention will be a contested convention.

REOPRTER: If the numbers aren't with you tomorrow, and if you don't get an indication, would you consider endorsing Hillary Clinton before the convention?

SANDERS: Let me just talk to you after the primary here in California where we hope to win.

(END VIDEO CLIP) CUOMO: So what happened, Errol? I mean, not so much the before and after. I get that he's going to be circumspect. He wants to see what the results are, see what his leverage is.

But in terms of the nature of the superdelegates, it does feel off that this "A.P." reporter, whatever teams of journalists making phone calls, getting Alisyn Camerota on the phone and she says, no, no, I'm for Hillary, I'm going to be for Hillary. My state hasn't voted yet.

It feels somehow undemocratic. What's the other side?

ERROL LOUIS, CNN POLITICAL COMMENTATOR: It feels -- well, the other side of this is that, this is what "A.P." always does. They do this every cycle, they've been doing it throughout the cycle. The poor "A.P." staffers have to call up the super delegates and hound them week after week after week and that's indeed what they've done.

So, in some ways, this is the superdelegates themselves who are maybe saying, you know what? I don't care about the choreography, maybe I want to put her over the top. It has, in fact, I think caught the Clinton campaign a little off guard, trying to make arrangements for tonight for my show about what we're going to hear and what we'll hear it, seems pretty clear they thought there was going to be, you know, New Jersey would be called at 8:00 and then there'd be an announcement, we're over the top.

It all got scrambled yesterday. So, it wasn't the best way to be rolled out but some of it is outside everybody's control. On the other hand, a notion of conspiracy here I think is just simply not the case. The superdelegates were really registered up front. They've been saying for months now what they were going to do.

(CROSSTALK)

GREGORY: There's no real evidence he's making strides at pulling them away. I mean, most of the calls they're getting are from the "A.P.", not from the Sanders' camp.

CAMEROTA: Maeve, it's also worth noting that in 2008, Bernie Sanders endorsed Barack Obama before Hillary Clinton had gotten out of the race and before the convention. Back when it was just the combination of pledged and super delegates. So why are the rules different now?

MAEVE RESTON, CNN NATIONAL POLITICAL REPORTER: Well, he just feels like this is an entirely different political climate. I was actually at that press conference in Little Tokyo over the weekend, where he could not have been more defiant and determined, saying that this was going to go all the way to a contested convention.

So, I think his advisers believe that they really need to see what happens in these six states today, particularly in California, and the irony of the "A.P." call yesterday is that this will just infuriate Bernie Sanders supporters who don't believe that this race is over. You know, they were out in force at all of his events this weekend. A lot of them saying they would not support Hillary Clinton in November. And so, it's just sort of a fascinating moment where we're going to

watch turnout all day today. But I bet that a lot more Bernie Sanders people will turn out just to kind of say, let's keep this going.

CUOMO: Well, maybe, maybe not.

CAMEROTA: But that's what they're worried about. That's what Clinton, I'm sure, camp is worried about.

CUOMO: I think that there are concerns for that, though I got to tell you, I mean, we all get calls by the campaigns. Bernie's people have been very consistent saying it's not over. What we don't like you're saying what the superdelegates are going to do before they vote.

That sounds good, David, but that's never how it works. These are people who are supporters and not waiting to be swayed, these super delegates.

GREGORY: Right. They've already pledged their support. These are the rules of the game.

CUOMO: They've also never determined an outcome, right? We've never had them determine an outcome? They usually go the way the pledged ratio suggests in each outcome?

GREGORY: You know, I think what's fair is to say that Bernie Sanders deserves room here. He's run a tremendous campaign. He has now, will continue to have, a lot of influence within the party, on the party platform, and, you know, President Obama has said it's kumbaya and unity right away once it was over back in 2008. And even him calling Sanders, applying some pressure, and those leaks yesterday applying pressure, Sanders has a right to go through California, the primary, take a breath and then find a way to work with Hillary Clinton.

And she's got to do the work, too, to bring her supporters onboard. You know, it was not easy between the Obama camp and the Clinton camp back in 2008, and it's not going to be instantaneous here. I do think the Trump factor makes it a little different. Democrats have a reason to fall in line and get united because there's a huge wild card and his name is Donald Trump in terms of her fortunes in the fall.

[06:10:00] CAMEROTA: So, Errol, if Bernie Sanders wins California, say, today. Does that change any of this equation?

LOUIS: Well, it gives him some bragging rights. It makes that negotiation a little different. If they say, well, look, we finished strongly.

I don't particularly know that he's going to win California, because the numbers didn't suggest that he was going to have a blowout win. I mean, that's really what will maybe change his negotiating stance a little bit, but, you know, it's one thing to give a candidate like Bernie Sanders space. He's got to step into that space, and really up until now, he has steadfastly turned aside every opportunity to start a conversation about what does Bernie want? What do Bernie Sanders followers want? You know, he's got his appointees to the platform committee but we

don't know what they're going to push for, he hasn't started to talk about what might be in line for sort of further down the ballot what he might want for some of his candidates. There are some Bernie Sanders people who wanted to run with him for other offices. What happens to them? His campaign staff. A lot of questions out there.

(CROSSTALK)

CUOMO: Fair point. He hasn't stepped -- a great way to put it, Errol Louis.

Maeve Reston, you've been reporting on this. Give us your final thought on it, because step into the space. As you've been reporting, we've heard from Bernie ourselves. It's not for me to tell my supporters to be for Hillary Clinton. She has to make the case, go for them.

That's not usually how it works. Usually, once you decide your race is for someone else, you're all in. And you say that. I'm all-in. My people are all-in. Not this time.

What's your take?

RESTON: Well, he has said that he will do everything in this power to help the Democrats defeat Donald Trump however this turns out. But, clearly, in these rallies as he's continuing to talk about Hillary Clinton as being part of the system, he's not pulling back on his attacks or his critiques of her, and as I said, his supporters, a lot of them have a lot of issues. They talk about her trust issues and integrity issues and that's going to be a big struggle for her that she's really going to need his help to bring them onboard.

CAMEROTA: Panel, thank you. Stick around. We have a lot to talk about with Donald Trump as well.

Coming up in our 8:00 hour, Hillary Clinton's campaign manager, Robby Mook, will join us live to talk about what the plan is for today and beyond.

CUOMO: On the other side of the ball, Donald Trump is not backing down or apologizing. Instead, he's ordering surrogates to intensify criticism of the federal judge who is overseeing civil case against Trump University, and now, more high-profile Republicans are attacking him because of this decision.

We got CNN's Jim Acosta live outside Trump Tower in New York.

Hey, Jim.

JIM ACOSTA, CNN SENIOR WHITE HOUSE CORRESPONDENT: Good morning, Chris.

That's right. As this primary part of the election battle is coming to the end, that's right. Donald Trump did hold a conference call with his staffers, his surrogates, his supporters where he urged all of the folk on his team to keep up the fight against federal Judge Gonzalo Curiel and now, some of his moment prominent critics are starting to change their tune.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

TRUMP: I don't care if the judge is Mexican or not. I'm going to do great with the Mexican people.

ACOSTA (voice-over): Donald Trump is refusing to back down or apologize for his attacks.

TRUMP: I don't care about Mexican, but we're being treated very unfairly.

ACOSTA: Calling for Judge Gonzalo Curiel to recuse himself from a civil case involving Trump University.

TRUMP: When you have thousands of students saying that the place was great, it was a great school, they loved it, this should be dismissed on summary judgment.

ACOSTA: His attacks on the judge --

TRUMP: I'm building a wall. He's a Mexican.

ACOSTA: -- are causing an uproar and unifying the GOP against his controversial rhetoric.

SEN. MARCO RUBIO (R), FLORIDA: The judge is an American and Donald shouldn't keep saying that. It's wrong Donald keeps saying that and it's inappropriate, wrong, offensive, I hope he'll stop. When I ran for president, I told everyone this is what would happen.

ACOSTA: On a conference call with staffers and surrogates, sources say Trump told them to keep up criticism of Judge Curiel.

JASON OSBORNE, DONALD TRUMP SUPPORTER WHO WAS ON THE CALL: When Donald Trump today on the call explained his side of the story it made complete sense. Here are the facts of the case and we need to continue to attack the bias that is going on out there.

ACOSTA: Even Trump's most prominent supporters are blasting his attacks, including Newt Gingrich, rumored to be on his V.P. short list.

NEWT GINGRICH (R), FORMER SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE: This is one of the worse mistakes Trump has made.

ACOSTA: But former House speaker dialed back his criticism last night.

GINGRICH: I thought he did a very good job of narrowing down his complaint, which I think, by the way, if you look at the record, is totally legitimate.

We're both big boys. He's doing a great job overall. I deeply disagreed on one item.

ACOSTA: Former rival Ben Carson also walked back his criticism, blaming the media as Trump frequently does.

BEN CARSON (R), FORMER PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: People assume on the basis of something that is said what a person believes when they could just ask him.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

ACOSTA: More criticism is coming in from Republican circles. Senator Tim Scott from South Carolina called Trump's comments on Judge Curiel racially toxic. Senator Lindsey Graham told the "New York Times" it is now the moment for prominent Republicans to start rescinding their endorsements.

[06:15:07] And as for criticism from Newt Gingrich, I talked to one prominent supporter GOP of Donald Trump who was on the conference call saying you could now take the former House speaker off the V.P. list just judging by how people on that phone call were feeling about Newt Gingrich's criticism of Donald Trump -- Alisyn.

CAMEROTA: Yes. It sounds like that list might have gotten shorter.

Jim, thank you very much for that.

Well, Donald Trump vowed, you'll remember, to unite the Republican Party, but his comments about the judge seemed to have the party uniting against him. We're talk about this latest controversy, next.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

CUOMO: Donald Trump is saying he wants to talk about the problems that are facing the country, but all people want to talk about is Trump University, that's because he said the judge was against him because he's Mexican. And he's not backing down from that.

He had a phone call yesterday. This is not something Trump does. He had staffer and surrogates on the phone and said nobody apologize, nobody back down, in fact, double down.

[06:20:05] So, let's bring back Errol Louis, David Gregory and Maeve Reston.

You know, we heard from Mark Cuban saying I'm afraid Trump's going to be a puppet president, doesn't know enough about certain issues, he'll have to be surrounded by advisers. This is a reflection of the real Trump. This is my instinct I'm doubling down.

Is it strong and wrong?

GREGORY: Right. Well, this is the question, who does Trump listen to aside from Donald Trump? I mean, this is why campaigns tell us something about the kind of leader that we might have as president of the United States based on how he interacts with staff members, how he interacts or reacts to scrutiny or crisis? And you're seeing Donald Trump circling the wagons, not listening to

people who are calling on him to moderate his stance, to apologize. I mean, how many party elders such as they are have you seen taking on the nominee of the party over comments that he's made? There's no disagreement about the fact what he said is completely wrong about this judge, and yet telling, contradicting his own staff, undercutting his staff.

Again, what does it tell us about the kind of chief executive he would be? This is a businessman whose business acumen is his calling card. What are we saying about how he runs a huge organization, which is his campaign?

CAMEROTA: Speaking of all of the Republicans, many of the Republicans coming out, speaks out against him, there does seem to be a bit of a groundswell. There was Marco Rubio, there was Michael Reagan, Ronald Reagan's son, Ben Sasse, of course, Lindsey Graham.

CUOMO: Lindsey Graham, yes.

CAMEROTA: Let me read to you what he told the "New York Times" yesterday. He said, "This is the most un-American thing from a politician since Joe McCarthy. If anyone was looking for an off-ramp this is probably it. There'll come a time when the love of country will trump hatred of Hillary."

CUOMO: Wow.

CAMEROTA: Now, Errol, explain something to me. After months, where Donald Trump said he would ban people based on their religion with a Muslim ban, where he went after the press, he was go to constrain or change the First Amendment, he mocked someone handicapped, why is it this, why is it the judge, what he says about the judge that seems to have created this groundswell?

LOUIS: Well, because it's an attack on the institution and it's a respected institution, and at a time and in a country where many of our institutions are not respected or not trusted, you know, political parties, the media. The judiciary is pretty respected. They do a good job, you know?

And this is deeply embedded in the American system where, you know, they have lifetime tenure for a reason. They dress in black robes, they all look the same. They don't look like humans, you know?

We really, we literally put them up above us when you go into a courtroom. We've done all that we could for centuries, to make sure that this is a respected, neutral effective institution and that by and large has happened. You look at the history of this particular judge, he's right in line with that honored tradition.

And to attack the judiciary, a lot of people, as Lindsey Graham says, this is the off ramp. Then, you put ethnic bias on top of it, somebody from a state like South Carolina, like Georgia, I think that's really where some of where Newt Gingrich's, you know, sort of racial reaction came from, where they'd seen racial politics, and see where it can go, and how bad it can be and all of these people putting up a hand, not so fast, Mr. Candidate, don't do that and, of course, he's got a different concept of leadership.

CUOMO: Well, it's all of the mistakes you can make and the wrong judgments wrapped up in one, and it starts with the fact that you can't underestimate how wrong he is. I was shocked at two things we heard yesterday. Newt Gingrich, who came out strong, initially saying, this was really wrong. He shouldn't have done it.

CAMEROTA: Yes

CUOMO: Great. Then he says, if you look at the record he's completely right.

Go examine the record. You can find it all now online. Newt is so smart. He couldn't be more wrong. The biggest decision in this case, two things. One, he released the playbooks. So much of that information was out there already. There was no huge fight within this case.

CAMEROTA: For Trump University the judge released.

CUOMO: That's right. The playbooks, they call them the playbooks. The biggest ruling this judge was made was to continue this case.

CAMEROTA: In favor of Donald Trump, exactly right, which is allowing this. You got 7,000 plaintiffs who came forward, all right? There are tens of millions are dollars on the line. What about their lives?

This judge balanced that, said, you know what, I'm going to delay this. There's a campaign going on. This matters. That's the biggest ruling he's made.

And then, you have the ethnic part of it, then the attack on the bench, then refusal to listen to other people. I mean, that's why I think this one is popping in a way when he just beats us up, it doesn't seem to matter as much.

CAMEROTA: Maeve?

RESTON: Yes, and I think that what's so interesting is that we've heard the entire time, people like Kelly Ayotte, other down ballot candidates who are in these tight races just really trying to fig are how they're going to parse their position on Donald Trump.

In Kelly Ayotte's case in New Hampshire, she talked about supporting him but not endorsing him. And then came out and condemn these comments.

This is why so many donors don't want their names on checks to Donald Trump.

[06:25:05] They don't see him as helping the party. When you think about all of the things that Reince Priebus and the RNC have done over the last couple of years in terms of outreach to minority communities and there's potential now for their nominee to come in here and completely unravel that.

So, I think there is a huge problem with a lot of candidates who are in tight races figuring out how to deal with this. He got a pretty big smack down on this.

GREGORY: Look, this is not an attack on the Constitution, right? This is not an offhanded comment. This is an attack on the judiciary. There's no other side. There's nobody who's saying, oh yes, no, it's good. Go out and respond.

CUOMO: O'Reilly in an interview with him, you can say why tactically he wanted to do it.

But he said, I think the judge should step down not because of anything on the merits but the perception of his future ruling. That's exactly why the judge needs to stay in place.

GREGORY: Right. Based on a racist attitude, which is because you're of Mexican ancestry, so African-American whose sit on the judiciary who deal with discrimination cases shouldn't be there? A woman can't deal with gender discrimination suits?

I mean, it's -- it has no merit on its face. As a political matter, as a strategic point, what is Donald Trump doing, done in the past couple of weeks, to build on the base of support from the primary? All he's done, would, to erode that. He's got to get into the game of addition, win more of the map, not take more of the map off the table in November. That leaves me quite puzzled, and, again, says something about how much of a gut player he is in this whole political process.

CAMEROTA: Errol, last night on "O'Reilly" we should note Donald Trump did say, he changed his tune a little bit. He said, "I don't care if the judge is Mexican or not. I'm going to do great with the Mexican people because I'm going to provide jobs, so I don't care about Mexicans but we're being treated unfairly," meaning in the case.

So, does that one, I don't care about him being Mexican erase the other dozen where he did care?

LOUIS: You know, look, the facts push the man is not Mexican, right. He's American.

CAMEROTA: Oh, yeah.

LOUIS: It doesn't erase it. I suspect, though, that when the candidate thinks about this in retrospect, win or lose, whether he gets past this or not politically he's going to wish he could take this one back. It's a much bigger mess than it ever needed to be.

CUOMO: And that's the biggest concern for the people around him that he's not taking it back.

RESTON: And technically --

CUOMO: Go ahead, Maeve. Give us the last word, quickly. RESTON: Tactically, this is just another example of Donald Trump

moving from one huge controversy to the next. I mean, what will it be next week that we'll be talking about? In some ways you have to wonder whether or not this is all somewhat, you know, intended on his part.

So, we're not talking about Trump University anymore. We're now talking about the judge. Next week, we'll be talking about something else. It's part of the brilliance of his cycle.

CUOMO: A lot of people say it, but the truth is, Trump University is a legal question. It could go either way. You got a fraud case with the New York I.G., but it could go either way. This stuff about the judge cannot go either way. So, I don't know how he helped himself.

CAMEROTA: Panel, thank you.

CUOMO: You know, we're dealing with a different type of emergency. A real one in Florida right now. You got Tropical Storm Colin. It made landfall. Neighborhoods under water.

Just take a look at your screens. We have a live report, next.