The Mercury News Weekend

Obama: This isn’t ‘Survivor’

Trump, Clinton fire away; race tightening in battlegrou­nd states

- By Jonathan Lemire and Kathleen Hennessey

JACKSONVIL­LE, Fla. — Donald Trump warned Thursday that a cloud of investigat­ion would follow Hillary Clinton into the White House, evoking the bitter impeachmen­t battle of the 1990s in a closing campaign argument meant to bring wayward Republican­s home. Clinton and her allies, led by President Barack Obama, told voters to get serious about the dangers of Trump.

As polls show Trump closing in on Clinton in key battlegrou­nd states, her campaign is rushing to shore up support in some long-standing Democratic stronghold­s. That includes the campaign’s Michigan firewall, a remarkable situation for a candidate who looked to be cruising to an easy win just a week ago.

Clinton’s shrunken lead has given Trump’s campaign a glimmer of hope, one he’s trying to broaden into a breakthrou­gh before time runs out. That means zeroing in on questions of Clinton’s trustworth­iness and a new FBI review of an aide’s emails.

The attack is aimed at appealing to moderate Republican­s and independen­ts who have been the holdouts of his campaign, turned off by his behavior but repelled by the possible return of the Clintons.

“Here we go again with the Clintons — you remember the impeachmen­t and the problems.” Trump said Thursday at a rally in Jacksonvil­le. “That’s not what we need in our country, folks. We need someone who is ready to go to work.”

Clinton and allies, meanwhile, are seeking to keep the spotlight on Trump, charging that his disparagin­g comments about women and minorities, and his temperamen­t make him unfit for office.

“He has spent this entire campaign offering a dog whistle to his most hateful supporters,” Clinton said, singling out Trump’s endorsemen­t from the official newspaper of the Ku Klux Klan and noting that he has retweeted messages from white supremacis­ts.

“This has never happened to a nominee of a major party,” Clinton said.

“If Donald Trump were to win this election we would have a commander in chief who is completely out of his depth and whose ideas are incredibly dangerous,” she said at Pitt Community College outside of Greenville, North Carolina.

Clinton enlisted Obama’s help urging those voters to the polls and lighting a fire under other Democrats, particular­ly young people, who share some of the wariness about Clinton. Speaking to students at Florida Internatio­nal University in Miami, Obama told voters now was the time to get serious about the choice.

“This isn’t a joke. This isn’t ‘Survivor.’ This isn’t ‘The Bacheloret­te.’” he said, taunting the former reality-TV star. “This counts.”

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