Chattanooga Times Free Press

Clinton prep overrides Trump omissions

- BY KEN THOMAS AND CATHERINE LUCEY

WASHINGTON — Studious and diligent, Hillary Clinton spent weeks getting ready for the first presidenti­al debate, poring over policy papers and sharpening attack lines in practice sessions. Donald Trump did not want to over-prepare and skipped running through a full mock session.

At the first presidenti­al debate of general election, it was clear who had done their homework.

Trump was forced to defend his role in the birther movement questionin­g President Barack Obama’s citizenshi­p, his refusal to release his income tax returns and his derogatory comments about women. But he never found a way to point to the FBI’s assessment of Clinton’s judgment in using a private email system, her family foundation or her recent comments calling half of his supporters a “basket of deplorable­s.”

Even when Trump accused Clinton of loafing during the campaign — “You decided to stay home and that’s OK,” he said — Clinton was ready to turn the tables, equating preparatio­n for the debate with readiness to be president.

“I think Donald just criticized me for preparing for this debate. And, yes, I did,” Clinton said. “And you know what else I prepared for? I prepared to be president. And I think that’s a good thing.”

Trump did effectivel­y argue that trade deals had hurt manufactur­ing jobs and made the case he was the change agent in the race. But Clinton wasn’t pressed by Trump or in some cases, the debate’s moderator, Lester Holt, on a number of her major vulnerabil­ities.

“He was unprepared at every level to take advantage of any opportunit­y that presented itself,” said Steve McMahon, a Democratic strategist and former adviser to Vermont Gov. Howard Dean’s 2004 presidenti­al campaign. “He had a pretty good 15 minutes and a bad hour and 15.”

When the discussion turned to her emails, Trump said it was “more than a mistake. That was done purposely,” and faulted Clinton’s aides for taking the Fifth Amendment to avoid incriminat­ing themselves. But he never noted that FBI Director James Comey had called Clinton and her colleagues “extremely careless in their handling of very sensitive, highly classified informatio­n.”

There were other omissions. Trump didn’t bring up the 2012 Benghazi attack, which was the subject of a lengthy Republican-led investigat­ion in Congress, or his charges that she created a “pay-for-play” atmosphere at the State Department that benefited the Clinton Foundation. Clinton’s lucrative paid speeches — including to large Wall Street banks — never came up.

Trump could have rallied the Republican base by discussing the potential for multiple Supreme Court vacancies during the next administra­tion or his plans to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border. But he raised neither.

When Clinton said in September that half of Trump’s supporters were in “a basket of deplorable­s,” a crowd she described as racist, sexist, homophobic or xenophobic, she was forced to clean up the statement the next day, stating she regretted saying “half.” At the time, Trump called it “the worst mistake of the political season.” But he never brought it up on Monday night.

“If there was concern about a candidate who didn’t have the stamina to go the distance, it clearly wasn’t Secretary Clinton,” said Rick Tyler, a Republican strategist who worked for Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, one of Trump’s presidenti­al primary rivals. “She was obviously prepared and he wasn’t. It was devastatin­g.”

Trump could have “hammered her on one her biggest weaknesses, which is the foundation. He missed it,” Tyler said. “He got hammered on everything. She nailed the birtherism to his forehead.”

In the debate’s aftermath, Trump said Holt had directed more aggressive questions at him rather than Clinton and suggested his microphone had been purposely sabotaged. But Sarah Isgur Flores, a Republican strategist and former adviser to Carly Fiorina’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign, countered that Holt gave both candidates enough leeway to have extended exchanges on issues.

“He just wasn’t prepared and it showed,” she said.

 ??  ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump speaks at a roundtable event Tuesday in Miami.
Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump speaks at a roundtable event Tuesday in Miami.

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