At rally for Clinton, Obama speaks up for protester supporting Trump
Hillary Clinton responded by saying she was “sick and exhausted of he negative, dark, divisive, risky vision and the anger of people who support Donald Trump”.
Clinton meanwhile, has seen the FBI re-launch its investigation into her use of a private email server during her time as secretary of state, in a decision her campaign team has questioned due to its timing so close to the election.
In her effort to be elected as the nation’s first female president on Tuesday, Hillary Clinton was courting African-American, Hispanic and Jewish voters in South Florida.
This is similar to 2012, when the Reuters/Ipsos tracking poll showed President Barack Obama with a 3 to 7 point advantage over Republican challenger Mitt Romney in the final days of the campaign while Real Clear Politics showed Obama’s lead almost vanishing ahead of the election.
“That pretty much mirrors what Trump supporters are saying nationally”, said Floyd Ciruli, the Pueblo native who established himself as a Colorado pollster decades ago.
Donald Trump is bragging that he doesn’t need celebrities like Jay Z to fill up arenas. “Michigan is now in play, we are going to teach them how to play”. She’s been pounding Trump for his record on race, accusing him of tacitly encouraging support from white supremacists. The former governor endorsed Trump after the first debate in September.
Donald Trump tore into President Obama for yelling at a protester during a rally in support of Hillary Clinton’s candidacy.
Saturday marks the final weekend of the 2016 US Presidential election campaign – as both candidates have their eyes set on the key state of Florida ahead of Tuesday’s landmark vote.
In Trump’s version, Obama scolded the protester, not the crowd.
“This isn’t a joke. We have no choice”, he said.
Both candidates campaigned in North Carolina on Thursday. Bernie Sanders and pop star Pharrell Williams.
Yet 21 per cent said it makes them less likely to vote for her, including 37 per cent of Republicans and 21 per cent of independents.
The Democratic Clinton campaign is trying to shore up support in MI and other traditional strongholds. He saluted veterans as “so much more fearless than me”. Trump described the heroes as being fearless in ways he wasn’t. “I’m financially fearless, big deal!”
Should that number break toward Trump, it could be a determining factor in the race. For example, he must win Florida, where polls show a neck-and-neck race.
In Pittsburgh, a city where one in three people are not white, Clinton hammered Trump as “someone who demeans women, mocks people with disabilities, insults African Americans and Latinos and demonizes immigrants and Muslims”.
Clinton and Democratic allies bounced from city to city. She was due to campaign Friday in Detroit, where a large turnout of black voters has always been crucial to success.
Hillary Clinton is stopping by an early voting location in Miami to encourage her supporters to cast their ballots as soon as possible.