The Phnom Penh Post

Trump, Clinton set to square off

- Brigitte Dusseau

WHO is going to win? Who is going to choke? The pressure is intense for Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton – phenomenal­ly different candidates – who clash in their first debate today.

Stakes are as high as they get since there are just six weeks until the November 8 election. Polls show a close race, with Clinton, 68, enjoying an edge.

As many as 90 million Americans, will be glued to their TVs for the showdown. Many analysts say debates usually don’t win a candidate the election but can well lose it for them. A single sentence, or the slightest slip, can do serious damage.

Plenty of American voters will have made a decision by now, to be sure. Most have.

But 9 percent by some estimates still don’t know who to vote for, after a long campaign in which bitter attacks have often replaced substance.

And this year has been like none in the past, with Trump, 70, using social media around the clock in combative fashion, while often making mistakes, misstateme­nts and blunders without troubling his base.

Clinton cram session

On Saturday, the New York Times endorsed Clinton, who has been cloistered with aides and her papers at home in Chappaqua, north of New York, even practicing with relatives playing Trump.

She has been focusing on his psychologi­cal profile, with a goal to get Trump to crack, to show he can’t control himself and lacks the temperamen­t a president needs. If he reacts by attacking, Trump also risks losing women’s votes; he already has a harder time with women voters, and they make up 53 percent of those who turn out. And any slip is sure to be a TV news sound bite.

Clinton’s campaign released a long list of lies it attributes to Donald Trump ahead of the debate. Trump in turn says preparatio­ns are “going very well”, trying to appear relaxed. On Friday he won the endorsemen­t of former conservati­ve rival Senator Ted Cruz.

“A year ago, I pledged to endorse the Republican nominee, and I am honoring that commitment,” Cruz wrote in a post on Facebook. “And if you don’t want to see a Hillary Clinton presidency, I encourage you to vote for him.”

Trump took Friday to prepare, and still had to work yesterday on the debate. But he continues with rallies on other days, including Saturday night in Roanoke, Virginia.

Trump seems unwilling to train with a Hillary stand-in. But he has watched videos of his opponents in previous debates. Supporters in Roanoke said they hoped Trump could keep his cool.

“I expect him to be more presidenti­al but still tough,” said Amanda Phillips, 36, and a social worker. She said she was “not 100 percent for the wall [with Mexico]”, and hopes Trump will be “more humane and not too hard core”.

‘Be yourself’

Clinton, making her second presidenti­al bid, is an old hand at debates and considered solid. In some ways, she may have more to lose.

After almost 40 years of public service, she is very well versed on the issues, and 88 percent of Americans believe she is smart.

But 65 percent say they do not find her honest. And 52 percent have a negative opinion of a woman they see as cerebral, distant or cold.

Her image has been sullied by Trump attacks over her email scandal, the Clinton Foundation’s alleged pay-toplay donations, and her ties to Wall Street.

“Be yourself and explain what motivates you,” President Barack Obama suggested to his former secretary of state.

Running-mate Tim Kaine has said of Clinton: “When the spotlights are at the brightest and the pressure is the most intense, that’s when she brings her A-plus game.”

Trump has not yet experience­d a presidenti­al debate: 90 minutes of intense questionin­g, with only one opponent and a moderator, who today will be NBC news anchor Lester Holt. But that does not worry the former reality TV star. He is good on his feet, and unpredicta­ble, more comfortabl­e in the limelight than on issues. He has promised to be “very respectful” with Clinton.

Trump is still perceived more negatively than Clinton: 61 percent of Americans have a negative view of him, many saying they are put off by his personalit­y and aggressive­ness.

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