Chattanooga Times Free Press

Trump resists new debate approach

- BY STEVE PEOPLES AND LISA LERER

COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa — Unmoved by harsh debate reviews, a defiant Donald Trump showed no sign Wednesday of making any big changes before his second faceoff with Hillary Clinton, pressing ahead with a strategy focused on speaking directly to his white working-class loyalists across the Midwest.

Democrat Clinton, meanwhile, pushed to improve her standing among younger voters with the help of the president, Sen. Bernie Sanders and other key allies, 48 hours after her debate performanc­e that seemed to spark badly needed enthusiasm.

Those closest to Trump insisted the Republican presidenti­al nominee was satisfied with Monday night’s debate, even as prominent voices within his own party called for more serious preparatio­n next time following an opening confrontat­ion marked by missed opportunit­ies and missteps. “Why would we change if we won the debate?” former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani, a key Trump ally and traveling partner this week, told The Associated Press. “Donald Trump is going to prepare for debates the way Donald Trump prepares for debates.”

The next debate is 11 days away.

Unlike Clinton, Trump is not planning to participat­e in any mock debates, although he is likely to incorporat­e what one person described as “tweaks” to his strategy. Specifical­ly, Trump is likely to spend more time working on specific answers and sharpen his attacks after spending much of the first meeting on defense, said that person, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal campaign strategy.

The New York businessma­n struggled to attack Clinton consistent­ly on the debate stage Monday night, but he has lashed out at her aggressive­ly in the days since. He attacked her record as the nation’s chief diplomat during a Wednesday appearance in Chicago. He went further at a later rally in Iowa.

“If she ever got the chance, she would put the Oval Office up for sale,” Trump told hundreds gathered in a Council Bluffs convention hall the day before early voting begins in the battlegrou­nd state.

He also mocked Clinton’s lighter campaign schedule. The Democrat conceded during the debate she had taken some time away from the campaign trail to prepare for their first debate stage meeting.

“You see all the days off that Hillary takes? Day off, day off, day off,” Trump charged, adding a swipe at his opponent’s recent bout with pneumonia that nearly caused her to collapse. “All those days off and then she can’t even make it to her car, isn’t it tough?”

Clinton, meanwhile, sought Wednesday to parlay her widely praised debate performanc­e into stronger support from women, young Americans and other critical voter groups. She got help from her party’s biggest stars.

President Barack Obama hammered the billionair­e over his business practices and treatment of women in an interview aired on Steve Harvey’s radio show, which is particular­ly popular among black audiences. The Democratic president said his own legacy was “on the ballot” in November.

And his wife, first lady Michelle Obama, accused Trump of trying to undermine her husband’s presidency for years by questionin­g his birthplace. Trump publicly admitted the president was born in America for the first time earlier in the month after spending years raising questions about the authentici­ty of Obama’s birth certificat­e.

Hoping to broaden her appeal among “millennial­s,” Clinton joined her primary rival, Vermont Sen. Sanders, on the trail for the first time since they held a “unity” rally in July in an attempt to heal divisions within the Democratic Party. Flanked by campaign signs promoting Clinton’s college affordabil­ity proposal, Sanders and Clinton touted a plan they developed to make college debt-free for millions of students from middle class and low-income families.

 ??  ?? Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., take the stage during a campaign stop at the University of New Hampshire in Durham, N.H., on Wednesday.
Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., take the stage during a campaign stop at the University of New Hampshire in Durham, N.H., on Wednesday.

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