The Asian Age

Two days to go: Clinton, Trump scramble to finish

- Dave Clark

Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton packed their schedules with last minute campaign events Sunday, two days out from an election that has gripped the world.

Clinton is banking on star power to lock in her narrow poll lead, hosting back-to-back weekend pop concerts with Beyonce and Katy Perry and booking a date with President Barack Obama.

For his part Trump has embarked on a cross-country odyssey through Iowa, Minnesota, Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia, Virginia, Florida, North Carolina and New Hampshire.

The latest major survey, the ABC/Washington Post tracker released early Sunday gave a Hillary a five percentage point 48-43 lead. Polling averages however are closer.

In the latest sign of the mounting tension and ugly mood of the campaign, Trump was briefly hustled off stage in Reno, Nevada, on Saturday in a false gun scare.

Trump was unruffled, although his son retweeted a message implying it was an “assassinat­ion attempt”. The Secret Service said that agents found no weapon.

Clinton’s camp mocked the 70-year-old tycoon’s scattersho­t approach to the electoral map as a sign of panic.

But the 69-year-old former secretary of state herself added an extra planned stopover in Michigan, a state that fellow Democrat Obama won easily in 2012.

The final 48-hour programmes released by both campaigns suggest that operatives believe the race is closer than either side admits.

Whether or not he is feeling the pressure as the campaign comes to the end, the billionair­e populist’s rhetoric remained triumphali­st.

“In three days we are going to win the great state of Colorado and we are going to win back the White House,” Trump promised supporters late Saturday in Denver, Colorado.

“You’re going to be so happy. We’re going to start winning again,” he intoned, urging voters to cast their ballots in person to avoid the risk of fraud in postal voting.

He hit his key themes: promises to tear up free trade agreements, expel undocument­ed migrants, rebuild an allegedly depleted US military and purge Washington of corruption.

And his fans roared back the same three-word chants: “Build the wall!” “Drain the swamp!” “Lock her up!”

Clinton’s campaign manager Robby Mook was scathing, telling reporters: “It looks like he’s just trying to go everywhere all at once.”

Mook argued that Trump’s packed schedule was sign of panic that he has failed to break through into Democratic territory.

But Clinton’s late decision to head to Michigan

Clinton is banking on star power to lock in her narrow poll lead, hosting backto-back weekend pop concerts with Beyonce and Katy Perry and booking a date with President Barack Obama. For his part Trump has embarked on a cross-country odyssey through Iowa, Minnesota, Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia, Virginia, Florida, North Carolina and New Hampshire.

with Obama on Monday and to add a midnight rally in North Carolina as election day begins raised eyebrows.

Mook dismissed suggestion­s that Clinton is bidding to shore up her crumbling firewall in the north, and predicted she would overturn Trump’s opinion poll lead in Florida.

“Donald Trump has to win all of these battlegrou­nd races,” he said. “If we win Pennsylvan­ia and Florida, he just has no path.”

The campaigns’ claims and countercla­ims resound far beyond the US.

US allies are fearful that a candidate who has threatened to review US treaty alliances is within striking distance of the White House.

There was scorn in Britain, where Trump effigies were burned instead of local hate figures on the traditiona­l November 5 Bonfire Night.

And in Germany, leading news weekly Der Spiegel on its front page depicted both candidates covered in the mud of a dirty campaign.

US foes like Russia and Iran have not hidden their mirth at the turmoil rocking US democracy.

Global markets fear an inexperien­ced demagogue with a protection­ist bent could plunge the US or even the world economy back into recession.

The polls are unclear. Clinton still enjoys a narrow nationwide advantage, a 2.1 percentage point lead according to a poll average by tracker RealClearP­olitics.

But the election will be won or lost in the US electoral college, and perhaps a dozen states are in play. Trump’s camp believes it can pick off enough of them on November 8.

His campaign has been torpedoed and holed but not yet sunk by allegation­s of sexual assault and the candidate’s own off-colour outbursts.

Meanwhile, the long-running saga of Clinton’s inappropri­ate use of a private email server — fed by announceme­nts and leaks from FBI investigat­ors — continues to cast a cloud over her pitch as the competent profession­al.

As the race comes down to the wire, Clinton has tried to pierce through the pessimism with an upbeat message, bringing in heavyweigh­t support from Obama and megastars like Beyonce and her husband Jay-Z.

We are seeing tremendous momentum, large numbers of people turning out, breaking records in a lot of places,” Clinton declared at a rained out rally in Florida, in reference to the early and mail voting permitted in several US states.

“Let’s vote for the future!” she added through the downpour, urging those who had already cast their ballots to help get their friends to the polls.

Earlier, at a Miami event, her supporters launched into a three-word get out the vote chant of their own: “Knock on doors! Knock on doors!”

Polling and anecdotal evidence suggests that Clinton supporters, in particular previously underrepre­sented Latino voters, have come out strongly in Nevada and Florida.

But Trump gets big and enthusiast­ic crowds at his rallies. “And you know what? I don’t need Beyonce and I don’t need Jay-Z,” he boasts.

As the race comes down to the wire, Clinton has tried to pierce through the pessimism with an upbeat message, bringing in heavyweigh­t support from Obama and megastars like Beyonce and her husband Jay-Z.

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 ?? — AP ?? This combinatio­n of photos shows supporters of Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton in Tempe, Ariz., and supporters of Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump in Baton Rouge, La.
— AP This combinatio­n of photos shows supporters of Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton in Tempe, Ariz., and supporters of Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump in Baton Rouge, La.

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