The Phnom Penh Post

Trump rips into Obamacare, Clinton

- Robyn Beck and Michael Mathes

WHITE House rivals Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump staged duelling rallies on Tuesday in crucial battlegrou­nd Florida, with the Republican billionair­e zeroing in on the Obamacare health overhaul as a job-killing, wallet-busting “monster.”

With just two weeks before the November 8 election, polls showed Democrat Clinton – who is vying to become America’s first female president – dominating nationally and looking for a resounding mandate to govern the bitterly divided country.

Early voting began in Florida on Monday, an urgent reminder that candidates have little time left to make their case in the country’s third most populous state, one with a wide mix of constituen­cies, including numerous retirees, Latinos and Bible Belt whites.

The Republican nominee, determined to ride out the controvers­ies hobbling his campaign, made a pitch to Florida’s elderly voters by assailing a sharp rise in health insurance premiums expected next year under President Barack Obama’s signature health care reform.

The Department of Health and Human Services reported Monday that premiums for midlevel health plans on the health law’s federal insurance exchange would rise by an average of 25 percent, but in some cities and states, increases will be considerab­ly higher. Trump asserted that rates would go up “60, 70, 80, 90 percent” – apparently referring to exorbitant jumps in select markets.

“It’s just blowing up,” the 70-year-old real estate mogul said at a golf course he owns in Doral, Florida, vowing to “repeal and replace” Obamacare if elected. “You will have such great health care at a tiny fraction of the cost and it’s going to be so easy,” Trump promised a rally in Sanford, Florida a few hours later.

At a third stop, in Tallahasse­e, he assailed the “stupid” government officials “who rammed this monster down our throats.”

“Job-killing Obamacare is just one more way that our system is rigged, believe me,” Trump said, and Clinton “wants to keep it”.

Poll averages show that the former secretary of state, who turns 69 yesterday, is ahead in Florida by 3.1 percentage points, and nationally by 5.4 points, ac- cording to RealClearP­olitics.

‘Bigger than me’

Rallying supporters at a college in southern Broward County near Fort Lauderdale, Clinton urged Floridians to help propel her to the White House by getting out and voting “right now.”

“This is bigger than me. It’s bigger than any of us. It’s even bigger than Donald Trump if you can believe it,” she told the cheering crowd.

Obama – who will campaign for Clinton on Friday in Florida – has said he wants an overwhelmi­ng Democratic victory in order to send the message that Americans reject Trump’s divisive rhetoric.

Clinton’s communicat­ions director Jennifer Palmieri made clear what a key piece of the election puzzle Florida represents for Democrats.

“We don’t plan to lose Florida. It is the biggest prize,” she said.

No one has forgotten the 2000 presidenti­al election hinged on Florida, where a virtual tie was decided in favour of George W Bush by the Supreme Court.

Earlier, Trump acknowledg­ed that the White House will likely elude him if he doesn’t win Florida and its 29 electoral votes.

“I think that’s probably true,” he said. “I believe Florida is must-win. I think we’re winning it, think we’re winning it big.”

On the stump in Sanford, Trump pointed to what he called “record” lines of early voters in Florida – many, he said, sporting Trump hats and buttons – as a hopeful sign.

He also took direct aim at Obama, alleging based on the WikiLeaks release of hacked Clinton campaign emails that the president knew about his secretary of state’s controvers­ial use of a private email server at the time. After news broke about Clinton’s private server, her aide Cheryl Mills apparently wrote senior staffer John Podesta, now the candidate’s campaign chairman, on March 7, 2015, to say “we need to clean this up”.

“He [Obama] has emails from her – they do not say state.gov,” Mills wrote, in the email quoted by Trump – which he said contradict­ed Obama’s claim to have learned about the private server from news reports. “In other words, they were saying he had to know Hillary was using an illegal server but he claimed otherwise,” Trump told his Tallahasse­e rally. “That means Obama is now into the act.”

Trump’s standing in polls has been hit hard, particular­ly among female voters, since this month’s release of a 2005 video on which he boasts that his celebrity allows him to grope women with impunity. Since then, about a dozen women have come forward with sexual misconduct allegation­s.

But a more discipline­d Trump largely stayed on message in Florida, attacking Clinton over taxes and foreign policy, and jabbing at her email scandal.

“The criminal conduct of Hillary Clinton threatens the foundation­s of our democracy,” Trump said, after the Tallahasse­e crowd broke into chants of “Lock her up!”

With his path to victory narrowing, Trump has railed against the “phony” polls and appealed to voters to turn out, calling it a “once-in-a-lifetime opportunit­y” to reject the political elite.

 ?? GREGG NEWTON/AFP ?? Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump addresses supporters at a rally on the tarmac of the Orlando-Sanford Internatio­nal Airport in Sanford, Florida, on Tuesday.
GREGG NEWTON/AFP Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump addresses supporters at a rally on the tarmac of the Orlando-Sanford Internatio­nal Airport in Sanford, Florida, on Tuesday.

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