The Palm Beach Post

Clinton girds for Trump’s Bill strategy

Campaign expecting GOP rival to launch attack on her over husband’s infideliti­es.

- Maggie Haberman and Amy Chozick

Hillary Clinton’s campaign is preparing for the possibilit­y that Donald Trump, reeling from harsh criticisms of his performanc­e at the first presidenti­al debate, will unleash a personal assault related to her husband’s infideliti­es at their next faceoff in a week.

It is an attack her campaign aides have been aware could come since 2015, when Trump’s aides raised the impeachmen­t battle that defined Bill Clinton’s second term as president to criticize Hillary Clinton’s character.

Now, with Trump’s advisers struggling to refocus the race away from his critiques of the appearance of Alicia Machado, the former Miss Universe winner who was invoked by Clinton during the debate, the Republican nominee’s campaign has signaled a slashing effort going forward.

Hillar y Clinton’s team, Democrats supporting her and many senior Republican­s believe that rehashing Bill Clinton’s behavior will be self-defeating for Trump, who is facing a historic gender gap and whose first marriage ended after an affair.

Clinton has also previously tended to benefit when she is seen as a victim of personal attacks.

Still, Democrats consider such tactics inevitable, particular­ly since Trump is now being advised by several people connected to efforts in the late 1990s to reveal Clinton’s affair with the White House intern Monica Lewinsky and to the subsequent impeachmen­t fight.

Trump’s debate prep sessions included discussion­s about using the attack as a response if Hillary Clinton discussed the Republican nominee’s treatment of women over the years. Now, there is a debate about whether to raise it to Clinton’s face at the next debate.

To prepare for such an a t t a c k , t he Cl i nt on c a mpaign and groups supporting her have pored over opposition research about Trump’s statements about women over the years, as well as his marital history.

Trump, a first-time candidate with a decades-long trail of negative comments about women’s appearance­s and abilities, has only haltingly broached both the subject of Bill Clinton and his infideliti­es — as well as disputed claims that Clinton worked to discredit women involved with her husband.

But through talking points administer­ed to surrogates that referred to Bill Clinton’s affairs and how Hillary Clinton handled them, Trump has injected it into the campaign.

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