Cape Breton Post

FIGHT TO THE FINISH

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Trump vs. Clinton debate settled nothing.

Donald Trump blamed the moderator, a bad microphone and anyone but himself Tuesday after he was forced onto defence by Hillary Clinton’s cascade of critiques about his taxes, honesty and character in the first presidenti­al debate.

The Republican nominee plunged into re-litigating some of Clinton’s most damaging attacks, even when the explanatio­ns seemed only to further damage his image among the voters he needs to win. After brushing off Clinton’s debate claim that he’d once shamed a former Miss Universe winner for her weight, Trump dug deeper the next morning.

“She gained a massive amount of weight. It was a real problem. We had a real problem,” Trump told “Fox and Friends” about the 1996 winner of the pageant he once owned.

Clinton, meanwhile, was in a celebrator­y mood, telling reporters on her campaign plane she had a “great, great time” and was “thrilled” by how it went. She accused Trump of making “demonstrab­ly untrue” claims in the debate and mocked him for floating the possibilit­y that debate organizers had set him up by lowering the volume on his “terrible” microphone so he was quieter than Clinton.

“Anybody who’s complainin­g about the microphone is not having a good night,” Clinton said.

Both campaigns knew the highly anticipate­d first debate could mark a turning point six weeks before Election Day, but it was unclear if either candidate would reap significan­t gains. Trump and Clinton are locked in an exceedingl­y close race and competing vigorously to win over undecided voters.

Though he said on Twitter he had “really enjoyed” the debate, Trump accused moderator Lester Holt of a left-leaning performanc­e and going harder on him than Clinton. He insisted he had “no sniffles” and no allergies despite the #snifflegat­e speculatio­n that had exploded on social media.

Still, Trump insisted he’d gotten the better of Clinton, awarding her a C-plus while declining to assign himself a grade. He also threatened to go harder after her in the next debate and said he’d planned to assail President Bill Clinton for his “many affairs” and stopped himself solely because daughter Chelsea Clinton had been in the room.

With precious few weeks left to campaign, both candidates returned promptly to the trail, with Clinton campaignin­g Tuesday in North Carolina and Trump in Florida. Those are among a handful of toss-up states whose winners could help determine the outcome of the election.

Clinton and Trump are slated to face each again on Oct. 9 in St. Louis. Asked about the possibilit­y Trump could pull out, Clinton said she’d show up regardless.

“If I’m the only person onstage, well, you know, I’m the only person onstage,” she said.

The two candidates’ first face-to-face showdown the night before was confrontat­ional from the start, with Trump frequently trying to interrupt Clinton and speaking over her answers. Clinton was more measured and restrained, often smiling through his answers, wellaware of the television cameras capturing her reaction.

Trump tried aggressive­ly to pin America’s problems on Clinton. But the Democrat, showing her intensive preparatio­ns, went after him as hard or harder, including sharp criticism of his business practices and false assertions about President Barack Obama’s birthplace, which she called part of a pattern of “racist behaviour.”

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 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton and Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump walk to their podiums to start their debate in New York state Monday.
AP PHOTO Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton and Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump walk to their podiums to start their debate in New York state Monday.

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