As the polling gap has widened, Trump has said repeatedly the election is being “rigged” against him.
“To say you won’t respect the results of the election, that is a direct threat to our democracy”, Clinton told a rally at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.
The other two presidential candidate Gary Johnson has 5 per cent support, Jill Stein 2 per cent. She’s voting for Clinton, she said, only because she can’t stomach “childish” Donald Trump. That’s according to several Clinton campaign aides, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss internal strategy. At times throughout the campaign, they were neck-and-neck in the state. Support at that level is more in line with the numbers generated by typical third-party candidates who don’t make much of a mark on Election Day itself, well off his flirtation with double-digit support through the summer and early fall.
“Let me tell you something: You go out on the road with Donald Trump, this election doesn’t feel over”, Conway said on CNN’s “State of the Union“.
“These conversations can be painful for everybody, but we have got to have them”. “Maybe that’s a role that is meant to be for my presidency if I’m so fortunate to be there”.
At least, that’s the message he is sending with contradictory remarks about where he stands in the polls relative to Democratic rival Hillary Clinton with 15 days left until the election.
Speaking to supporters Saturday in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, Trump called his accusers “liars” running a smear campaign against him on behalf of the Democrats.
“Donald is still going to whine if he loses”. “It’s a tactic from their side to get people to think we’re already defeated”.
While Warren waited until after the Democratic primary was over to endorse Clinton, she has been pushing the former NY senator on personnel appointments for almost two years.
In Las Vegas, Clinton was getting a campaign boost from singer and pop icon Katy Perry, who was pushing early voting.
Campaigning alongside Democratic presidential nominee Clinton 15 days before the election, Warren mocked Trump as a bigot and a sexist boor.
But if Clinton wins, Warren is expected to turn from cheerleader into watchdog – a towering presence in the Senate trying to hold Clinton to campaign promises on issues like student debt and Wall Street reform, while also guarding against nominees with deep ties to the financial industry.
After a 2005 video of Trump’s lewd comments about women surfaced, Ayotte said she dropped her support of him.
Donald Trump and his team, facing widening deficits in the polls, insist the Republican nominee can still win.
“On Nov 8, Clinton’s claims of a mandate will fly in the face of reality”. “She’s the one that started that”, Trump said.
Sixty-five percent of likely voters reportedly disapprove of his refusal to say whether he’d recognize a Clinton win as legitimate.
“Emboldened by polls predicting an electoral college Clinton landslide, her campaign is pouring resources into states like IN and Missouri”.
For comparison, 59 percent of likely voters disapprove of Clinton’s handling of questions about her email practices while secretary of state, including 31 percent of Democrats, 65 percent of independents and 84 percent of Republicans. “The current president and first lady, vice president, all much more popular than she can hope to be”. Bernie Sanders of Vermont over the moderate Clinton by a wide margin.
Two other Republican-leaning states could prove tempting. The president lashed out at Trump and praised Clinton as he campaigned Sunday in Nevada, a competitive state in the race for the White House and the Senate.