The Philippine Star

Clinton widens lead over Trump

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CHARLOTTE (AFP) — With just over two weeks to go before Americans vote for a new president, Hillary Clinton — who has widened her lead over Donald Trump — is stepping up her efforts in key battlegrou­nd states to consolidat­e her lead.

The Democratic former secretary of state vying to become America’s first female president leads the Republican real estate mogul among likely voters by 50 percent to 38 percent, according to a national

ABC News poll. That is her highest score since the start of the race to succeed Barack Obama in the White House.

“We are behind,” Trump’s campaign manager Kellyanne Conway admitted Sunday on

NBC’s “Meet the Press,” neverthele­ss insisting that the race was not over.

At an evening rally in Naples, Florida, the 70-year-old Trump called on his supporters to turn out en masse to “get rid of Crooked Hillary once and for all,” using one of his favorite nicknames for his rival.

“Numbers are looking phenomenal in Florida. Don’t believe the media,” he insisted.

The Sunshine State is a key prize in the presidenti­al race, one of several battlegrou­nd states that are key for both candidates if they want to win on Nov. 8. Most polls put Trump a few points behind Clinton there.

Conscious that winning the minority vote will help lead her to victory, the 68-year-old Clinton started her day Sun- day at a mainly black church in Durham, North Carolina — another of the swing states up for grabs.

Obama won the southern state by a razor-thin margin in 2008, but lost it to Mitt Romney four years later. Team Clinton is pulling out all the stops to put it back in the Democratic win column.

Before a congregati­on that included Sybrina Fulton — the mother of slain unarmed black teen Trayvon Martin, whose death shocked America in 2012 — Clinton called for awareness of the “systemic racism” seen across the country.

“If we are honest with each other, we know we face the continuing discrimina­tion against African- Americans and in particular young African-Americans,” she said.

Clinton will return to North Carolina on Thursday with the woman who has emerged as one of her best campaign weapons — Michelle Obama. It will be their first joint rally for the former and current first ladies.

The new ABC News poll said 69 percent of likely voters disapprove of Trump’s response to questions about his treatment of women, after a series of women alleged he either groped or forcibly kissed them in years past.

Trump has strongly denied those allegation­s, and on Saturday threatened to sue the “liars” who came forward with claims about his past behavior.

Clinton is leading nationally in both two-way and four-way contests by an average of about six points, according to RealClearP­olitics. She is also ahead in most of the crucial battlegrou­nd states.

Trump is clinging to an edge — but only a slight one — in traditiona­lly Republican stronghold­s like Texas, where he has a three-point lead.

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