Weekend Herald

Politics’ not- so- level playing field

Is Donald Trump getting an easier ride than Hillary Clinton on the campaign trail, ask Lisa Lerer and Catherine Lucey

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or months, Hillary Clinton’s supporters have griped that she’s held to a higher, harder standard than Donald Trump. After Thursday’s forum on national security, those complaints became a rallying cry.

In the opening segment of the made- for- TV event, moderator Matt Lauer interrupte­d Clinton’s answer to his first question, about what it takes to be commander in chief, to set up 10 minutes of questions about her use of a private email system and her vote for the Iraq war.

Trump seemed to skate by a half hour later as he repeated — unchalleng­ed — the false claim that he was against the war, even though he voiced support for it in a 2002 interview. When Lauer introduced a question about how the Republican nominee is boning up on issues, he told Trump, “nobody would expect you” to have delved deeply into foreign policy.

The forum underscore­d a debate that’s rapidly becoming a focal point in the race: Is the first female presidenti­al nominee of a major US party being judged fairly? Clinton’s answer, unsurprisi­ngly, is no.

“I don’t understand the reason for it,” Clinton said yesterday. “I find it frustratin­g, but it’s just part of the landscape that we live in and we just keep forging ahead.”

Throughout his White House campaign, Trump has repeatedly defied the convention­al rules of politics, winning his party’s nomination despite a history of corporate bankruptci­es and lawsuits that would have sunk a more traditiona­l candidate. With impunity, he repeats statements debunked by fact checkers.

Two months before Election Day, Trump’s policies remain largely unformed. In some cases, as with his plans to defeat Isis ( Islamic State), Trump says they’re purposeful­ly shrouded in secrecy. At the forum, he said the best way to address sexual assault inside the armed services would be to “set up a court system within the military” — something that has existed since the Revolution­ary War.

Meanwhile, Clinton’s campaign this week published a 250- page book

 ?? Picture / AP ?? Hillary Clinton says she had to learn as a young woman to control her emotions but that she doesn’t want to appear ‘ walled off’.
Picture / AP Hillary Clinton says she had to learn as a young woman to control her emotions but that she doesn’t want to appear ‘ walled off’.

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