The Philippine Star

Trump hits ‘corrupt’ Hillary

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WINSTON-SALEM (AP) — Trailing with time running out, Donald Trump denounced both Hillary and Bill Clinton Thursday as creatures of a corrupt political system who would use another pass at the Oval Office to enrich themselves at the expense of American families.

Clinton turned to popular first lady Michelle Obama to rally voters in North Carolina, a state that could deliver a knockout blow to Trump.

Trump seized on newly public e-mails in which longtime Bill Clinton aide Doug Band describes overlappin­g relationsh­ips of the Clintons’ global philanthro­py and the family’s private enrichment. The e-mails were among thousands stolen from the private account of a top Clinton aide, part of a hacking the Democratic campaign has blamed on the Russians.

“Mr. Band called the arrangemen­t ‘unorthodox.’ The rest of us call it outright corrupt,” Trump declared during a rally in Springfiel­d, Ohio. “If the Clintons were willing to play this fast and loose with their enterprise when they weren’t in the White House, just imagine what they’ll do in the Oval Office.”

Band wrote the 2011 memo to defend his firm, Teneo, describing how he encouraged his clients to contribute to the foundation and provide consulting and speaking gigs for Bill Clinton. Some of his work included obtaining “inkind services for the president and his family — for personal travel, hospitalit­y, vacation and the like.”

Clinton made no mention of the revelation­s as she campaigned alongside Mrs. Obama, their first joint appearance of the campaign. The first lady has emerged as one of Clinton’s most powerful surrogates, passionate­ly touting her experience and denouncing Trump as too divisive and thinskinne­d for the White House.

“We want someone who is a unifying force in this country, someone who sees our difference­s not as a threat but as a blessing,” Mrs. Obama said as she addressed an enthusiast­ic, 11,000-person crowd, one of Clinton’s biggest of the campaign. Trump often points out that his crowds are generally larger than his rival’s.

Mrs. Obama also accused Trump’s campaign of trying to depress voter turnout and panned his provocativ­e assertion that the results of the Nov. 8 contest may be rigged.

“Just for the record, in this country, the United States of America, the voters decide elections,” the first lady said. “They’ve always decided.”

With a lead in the race for weeks, Clinton’s campaign is concerned that her advantage could prompt some of her backers to stay home on Election Day or cast protest votes for a third- party candidate. Nearly all of her recent events have been in states where early voting is already underway, aimed at using the rallies to prompt supporters to bank their votes now.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Photo shows a woman drying persimmons at a workshop in Shandong province, China Thursday.
REUTERS Photo shows a woman drying persimmons at a workshop in Shandong province, China Thursday.

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