Reality Check: Trump’s wild misrepresentation of Obama’s response to a protester
Marshal every volunteer. Lob every attack.
Ms Clinton and Mr Trump are making their closing arguments to American voters, crisscrossing the USA in hopes of convincing last-minute undecided voters and rallying their bases to turn out enthusiastically on Tuesday.
Just two days before the election, it just goes to show how important Florida is in this election.
The Fox poll of 1,107 likely voters was fielded November 1 to November 3 and has a sampling error of 3 percentage points. On Friday, Vice President Joe Biden campaigned in Wisconsin, Sen.
Trump is even going to Minnesota and is sending Mike Pence there as well, a sign they’re growing increasingly anxious that they aren’t finding a way to break through Democratic-leaning states in the Upper Midwest.
“This will be a close race and you can not take it for granted”, Obama warned supporters in Jacksonville, painting an apocalyptic vision of what Trump would mean for American democracy. Having made the new Federal Bureau of Investigation review a centerpiece of his closing case to voters, he argued that the Democrat was being protected by a “totally rigged system”. The big personalities on both sides have overshadowed more nuanced questions.
Then FBI Director James Comey disclosed his agency was scouring a newly discovered cache of emails that may or may not produce relevant information about how Clinton handled classified State Department materials.
Donald Trump has criticised President Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton for dragging the USA into wars overseas and said the rival presidential candidate’s foreign policy would mean “generations of terrorism” into American schools, but his plan would put “America first”.
“It’s not going to matter because if we win I’m throwing it out anyway”, Ms Trump said.
Lest the country forget his accomplishments, he used his speech to revisit what he considers his greatest hits: 20 million Americans who have gained health coverage, unprecedented steps on climate change, the death of Osama bin Laden.
Despite close polling at the national level, Trump’s chances at victory remain slim due to Democratic-leaning in several key swing states.
Most polls still suggest he is the outsider, but in a race full of unusual twists, a Chinese monkey described as the “king of prophets” has tipped him to win. Early voting has surged in the state.
The candidates rallied voters late into the night, a frenzied end to a bitter election year that has laid bare the nation’s deep economic and cultural divides. Republicans have a very narrow edge in ballots cast. That is, of everyone who has voted early so far in the Silver State, there are 6 points more registered Democrats than Republicans.
Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway, speaking on a call with reporters through the Republican National Committee (RNC), said Trump was expanding his reach to historically Democratic states and is “now competing in states where people wrote us off months ago”.
Both candidates are leaning on surrogates to help carry their message.
Earlier in the day at a rally in Pittsburgh, Clinton cited the government’s latest jobs report as evidence of the economy’s strength. She and Michelle Obama campaigned in Arizona, usually a GOP stronghold, and her campaign ballyhooed new spending in Missouri, Indiana and elsewhere. Bernie Sanders in Iowa, and Obama in North Carolina.
Trump revved up his schedule in the final days of the campaign, sprinting across Florida, North Carolina, Nevada and Colorado as part of an 11-rally final push in eight states in the final three days.
The Associated Press reported that Trump´s Slovenia-born wife Melania took paid modeling work in the 1990s before obtaining a legal U.S. work permit.