Toronto Star

Day after bitter debate, Trump and Clinton square off at New York City charity dinner

- JONATHAN LEMIRE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK— The annual Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner, a white-tie gala in New York, is traditiona­lly a time when campaign hostilitie­s between presidenti­al candidates are set aside. Not this year. Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton traded sharp barbs and brutal takedowns the night after their final debate, with many in the well-heeled crowd turning on the Republican nominee midway through his remarks and showering him with jeers.

Trump, who had drawn big laughs earlier in the speech, appeared to lose the room as he repeatedly dug in with caustic swipes at Clinton, drawing rare boos at a charity event meant to raise money for impoverish­ed children throughout New York.

He appeared to straddle the line when he talked about how “listening to Hillary rattle on and rattle on” has made him better appreciate his former nemesis Rosie O’Donnell. But he then seemed to cross it when he referred to her as “corrupt” during a lengthy riff on the FBI’s investigat­ion into her use of a private email server as secretary of state.

“Hillary is so corrupt she got kicked off the Watergate Commission. How corrupt do you have to be to get kicked off the Watergate Commission? Pretty corrupt,” he said to loud boos and at least one call demanding he get off the stage.

He then almost appeared to segue into the standard attack lines of his rally speeches, setting aside jokes to bring up material contained in hacked Clinton campaign emails.

Clinton also veered into personal digs, making one joke in which she said the Statue of Liberty, for most Americans, represents a symbol of hope for immigrants.

“Donald looks at the Statue of Liberty and sees a ‘4,’ ” Clinton said. “Maybe a ‘5’ if she loses the torch and tablet and changes her hair.”

Trump and Clinton sat one seat apart for the evening, with New York’s Cardinal Timothy Dolan acting as the only buffer. And when they entered and took their seats, they did not greet each other or make eye contact, though they did shake hands at the conclusion of the roast.

Dolan later called his seat “the iciest place on the planet.”

Some of Trump’s jokes drew laughs from the crowd and Clinton.

His biggest laughs came as he talked about Michelle Obama getting rave reviews for a recent speech. “They think she’s absolutely great. My wife Melania gives the exact same speech, and people get on her case,” he said to whoops and laughs.

And some of his attack lines flashed a sense of humour that has been mostly absent from the grueling campaign. Clinton was the first one to laugh when Trump joked that she had bumped into him earlier in the night “and she very simply said ‘Pardon me’ ” — an unsubtle reference to the Republican nominee’s frequent declaratio­ns that his opponent should go to jail.

 ?? SPENCER PLATT/GETTY IMAGES ?? Presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump speaks at the 71st Annual Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner as Hillary Clinton laughs at his comments.
SPENCER PLATT/GETTY IMAGES Presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump speaks at the 71st Annual Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner as Hillary Clinton laughs at his comments.

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