Toronto Star

Clinton flexes star power in pivotal states

Republican rival fights last-minute battle on his own, little sign of party support

- LISA LERER AND STEVE PEOPLES THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PEMBROKE PINES, FLA.— Fighting as a party of one, Donald Trump vowed Saturday to press into Democratic stronghold­s over the campaign’s final days as Hillary Clinton looked to an army of A-list celebritie­s and politicos to defend her narrowing path to the presidency.

The divisive Republican outsider conceded he was largely on his own — even as he promised to march into Minnesota, a state that hasn’t backed a GOP presidenti­al nominee in more than four decades.

“Hillary Clinton has all of these celebritie­s and failed politician­s out campaignin­g for her,” a defiant Trump declared in North Carolina, one of four battlegrou­nd states he was visiting on Saturday. “I just have me, but I have my family.” Responding to Trump’s push, Democrat Clinton announced plans to devote valuable attention to Michigan, another unlikely battlegrou­nd where both she and President Barack Obama planned to campaign on Monday.

The Democratic nominee faced dark skies Saturday in Florida, fighting intense rain and wind in a key battlegrou­nd state before a Pennsylvan­ia appearance with pop singer Katy Perry.

Clinton was preparing to campaign Sunday with basketball superstar LeBron James, having shared the stage the night before with music diva Beyoncé and hip-hop mogul husband Jay Z.

“My personal favourite part — Beyoncé had her backup singers in pantsuits” Clinton said with a laugh in Pembroke Pines, Florida.

The final-days scramble highlighte­d sharp difference­s between the campaigns in a turbulent 2016 campaign season.

Backed by Obama and her party’s political elite, Clinton spent much of the past year fighting to unify Obama’s coalition of minorities and younger voters, aided at times by Trump’s deep unpopulari­ty among women in both parties.

Hispanic voters in key states surged to cast their ballots in the final days of early voting this weekend, a demonstrat­ion of political power that lifted Clinton’s presidenti­al hopes. In Florida, energized by the groundswel­l of Latino support and hoping to drive even more voters to the polls, Clinton visited a handful of immigrant communitie­s Saturday and rallied Democrats in a town filled with Hispanic and Caribbean migrants.

Trump has courted white workingcla­ss voters on the strength of his own celebrity, having scared off many would-be Republican allies during a campaign marred by ex- traordinar­y gaffes and self-created crises. Just four weeks ago, a video emerged in which a married Trump admitted to kissing women and grabbing their genitalia without their permission.

Even with the damaging video, Clinton faced extraordin­ary challenges of her own in recent days after the FBI confirmed plans to renew its focus on the former secretary of state’s email practices.

The developmen­t is seen as particular­ly threatenin­g for Clinton in states, like Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia and New Hampshire, which don’t offer early voting.

At least 41million Americans across 48 states have already cast ballots, according to an Associated Press analysis. That’s significan­tly more votes four days before Election Day than voted early in the 2012. House Speaker Paul Ryan campaigned Saturday alongside Trump’s running mate, Mike Pence — a rare show of unity, but not with Trump himself.

The speaker encouraged Republican­s to “come home” to support Trump in Ryan’s home-state Wisconsin, ignoring for a day his icy relationsh­ip with the Republican nominee.

Trump has frustrated party leaders in many ways, particular­ly by ignoring the hard work that fuels most successful modern-day campaigns.

The Republican outsider has done little to collect data on prospectiv­e supporters. He has no significan­t staffing presence on the ground in key states. And he has been unwilling to invest in a major advertisin­g campaign to keep pace with his Democratic rival.

Clinton’s campaign has spent more than $267 million in television advertisin­g through election day. Trump, who claims a net worth of roughly $10 billion, has invested $93 million, according to data collected by Kantar Media.

His entire campaign strategy has hinged on an aggressive schedule packed with massive rallies. The path of his luxury campaign jet has been fuelled by somewhat risky ambition at times, however.

Rather than hunkering down in must-win Florida this weekend, Trump flew Saturday to Democratic-leaning territory: Wilmington, North Carolina, then Reno, Nevada, and Denver. And as defiant as ever, he promised to make subsequent appearance­s in Pennsylvan­ia, Michigan and Minnesota.

Minnesota hasn’t cast its electoral votes for a Republican since 1972. A Republican nominee hasn’t won Michigan or Pennsylvan­ia since 1988.

“We’re going into what they used to call Democrat stronghold­s, where we’re now either tied or leading,” he said in Florida.

Later in the day in a North Carolina appearance, he mocked Clinton’s schedule: “She doesn’t have what it takes to do rallies all over the place. She wants to go home and go to sleep.”

Trump was rushed off stage by the Secret Service during a rally in Nevada but returned within minutes.

He had been speaking to supporters in Reno for a while when a disturbanc­e broke out in the crowd close to the podium.

Two Secret Service agents quickly surrounded Trump, then hustled him off stage.

The nature of the disturbanc­e was unclear. But several security officials escorted a man out of the venue soon afterward.

Upon his return, Trump thanked the Secret Service. He told the crowd: "Nobody said it was going to be easy for us. But we will never be stopped. Never ever be stopped."

 ?? PEDRO PORTAL/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Hillary Clinton hugs Sybrina Fulton, mother of Trayvon Martin (slain in a controvers­ial shooting in Florida in 2012), during a campaign rally in Pembroke Pines, Fla., Saturday.
PEDRO PORTAL/TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Hillary Clinton hugs Sybrina Fulton, mother of Trayvon Martin (slain in a controvers­ial shooting in Florida in 2012), during a campaign rally in Pembroke Pines, Fla., Saturday.

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