FOCUS ON BATTLEGROUND STATES
With the White House race decided on the Electoral College system of tallying wins on a state-by-state basis, Clinton and Trump are focused on a handful of battleground states. Trump began the day in Florida before heading to North Carolina for two rallies. Clinton was in North Carolina for two rallies.
Florida and North Carolina are both must-win states for Trump as he tries to piece together the 270 electoral votes needed to capture the White House.
Clinton, who has comfortable leads in big states such as California and New York, could more easily reach 270 votes without winning either state.
In Florida, Trump pressed his argument that the controversy over Clinton’s use of a private server for her e-mail rather than a government system when she was US secretary of state from 2009 to 2013 was part of a pattern of corruption that made her unfit for the White House.
FBI Director Comey concluded at the end of a year-long FBI probe in July that there were no grounds to bring any charges.
His brief letter advising Congress last Friday about the agency reviewing new e-mails said they might or might not be significant, but the news was seized on by Trump and other Republicans.
Republicans in Congress already have vowed to lead investigations of Clinton’s e-mail practices and her family charitable foundation.
“She is likely to be under investigation for many, many years. Also likely to conclude in a criminal trial,” Trump said in Jacksonville.
“This is not what we need in this country folks. we need somebody that’s going to go to work.”
Trump’s Slovenian-born wife Melania tried to bolster his standing with women during her first campaign-trail appearance, in a Philadelphia suburb.
“We must win on Nov. 8 and we must come together as Americans. We must treat each other with respect and kindness even when we disagree,” she said in Berwyn, Pennsylvania.
Clinton was in Arizona on Wednesday evening, addressing one of her largest rallies to date.
She told a crowd of about 15,000 at Arizona State University to imagine life with the volatile Trump in the White House, particularly for women, Latinos and Muslims.
Trump, a New York businessman who has never previously run for political office, has called for a ban on Muslims entering the country, launched his campaign by calling illegal immigrants from Mexico rapists and was captured in a 2005 video that surfaced last month boasting of groping women and making other unwanted advances.
“What would your life be like if he were in the White House?” Clinton said. “And the truth is we really don’t have to guess. We just have to look at everything he has said and done in his career and this campaign, it’s a good preview of what would likely happen,” she said.
Not all Clinton supporters were worried about her recent slip in the polls.
“There’s nothing I can do about it. With age comes a certain perspective,” said Jim Friederichs, 64, a gardener in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin.
“I know people that are not sleeping well because they’re worried about the election but jeez, what’s the point in that?“
source arabnews
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