Baltimore Sun

General election fight begins

Charges fly from Clinton, Trump after convention­s

- By Chris Megerian and Melanie Mason Chris Megerian reported from Philadelph­ia and Melanie Mason from Colorado Springs. Reporter Evan Halper in Philadelph­ia contribute­d.

PHILADELPH­IA — Fresh off her history-making presidenti­al nomination, Hillary Clinton set off for a Rust Belt bus tour Friday while Donald Trump made his pitch in Colorado, a swing statecentr­ic kickoff to what promises to be a bruising 100-day general election fight.

Clinton is touring the battlegrou­nds of Pennsylvan­ia and Ohio to try to sway white working-class voters attracted to the New York businessma­n’s anti-immigrant appeals and his promises to “rip up” unfair trade deals blamed for the loss of manufactur­ing jobs.

Opening the tour with a rally here in the city where she became the first woman to accept a major party’s presidenti­al nomination, she accused Trump of issuing empty promises and blasted him for manufactur­ing his own products, like ties and shirts, in other countries.

“He doesn’t make a thing in America except bankruptci­es,” she said to a crowd of more than 5,000 in a gymnasium at Temple University. Clinton is promising new investment­s in clean energy and transporta­tion infrastruc­ture that would create jobs in areas where high unemployme­nt has lingered after the Great Recession.

“We’ve made progress, but we have work to do to make sure everybody is included,” she said.

Trump was in Colorado Springs, a conservati­ve area GOP presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump rallied in Colorado on Friday as his rival, Hillary Clinton, toured the Rust Belt. of a state where he faces an uphill climb with growing numbers of young profession­als and Latinos.

While Clinton has pushed an optimistic message, Trump has repeatedly described the country as being dragged down by establishm­ent politician­s.

“Same old stuff, our country needs change!” Trump tweeted after Clinton’s rally in Philadelph­ia.

Before a crowd of several thousand at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs, he dismissed Clinton’s convention speech as “so average” and crowed about topping Democrats in television ratings for their respective gathering’s final nights.

Don Reeg, a 64-year-old bricklayer, said Trump needed to stick with his plan to fight crime and boost border security.

“A lot of people don’t like it, but that’s OK,” he said. “He just needs to stick with the theme he’s been doing, and he’ll be fine.”

Polls have shown a close race, although how the public gauged Clinton’s performanc­e at the Democratic convention won’t be known for several days.

Both candidates have proved to be deeply unpopular with voters in general.

“This will be a battle of how much each candidate can make you hate the other candidate,” said Laura Carno, a Republican strategist.

Clinton’s convention marked the official end of a divisive primary battle with Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, whose most passionate supporters she has struggled to win over.

But there were signs of hard-fought unity within the Democratic Party this week, and even some diehard Sanders supporters felt more comfortabl­e voting for Clinton.

For Tim Weaver, a 34year- old delegate from Texas, it was the parade of party luminaries — President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth Warren and Sanders himself — that won him over.

“A lot of people that I trust have spoken for her,” he said.

The convention was also a chance to emphasize parts of Clinton’s biography, like her work for the Children’s Defense Fund after graduating from law school, that remain less well-known than her more controvers­ial tenure as a politicall­y active first lady.

“In the 1990s, I would have told you I am never voting for Hillary. I didn’t like her,” said Jane Storsten, 62, of New Jersey, who has come around to backing Clinton.

“I got a chance to look at her record. Her actual record, what she’s done. I didn’t know about a lot of these things.”

Clinton seemed ready to seize her historic moment. The loudspeake­rs blared the Sheryl Crow anthem “Woman in the White House,” and supporters wore buttons saying “Madam President.”

One woman from South Jersey attended the rally with her two young daugh- ters wearing homemade shirts saying “I can be president.”

While Trump has pledged to put “America first,” Clinton has tried to portray him as a bully out for himself.

“His convention seemed more about insulting me than helping the American people,” Clinton said.

Trump supporters had mixed feelings about the Democratic convention.

Ernie Albertsen, a retired general contractor, dismissed all of the speakers as liars.

“They’re just up there barking like a rabid dog,” he said.

But his wife, Jeanne Noel, an engineerin­g technician, was worried.

“There’s so much support for Hillary,” Noel said. “I was scared for the first time for Trump.”

After leaving Philadelph­ia, Clinton stopped in Hatfield, a town of 3,300 about 30 miles north of Philadelph­ia, to visit K’NEX, a company that makes constructi­on toys. She and her running mate, Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine, were to hold another rally in a downtown market at Harrisburg, the state capital another 100 miles west, late Friday.

Other stops on the threeday tour are expected to include Pittsburgh and, in Ohio, Youngstown and Columbus.

The trip echoed a similar one taken by her husband, Bill, when running for president in 1992.

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EVAN VUCCI/AP
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JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY

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