DONALD TRUMP

RALEIGH,
N.C., and GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. — A confident Hillary Clinton spent her
final day on the presidential campaign trail flanked by pop stars, her
family and the Obamas, promising to try to heal the country if she’s
elected president.
Across
four rallies in three states, Clinton looked ahead to a potential
victory, promising voters she would bring a divided country together as
president and reflecting in the past tense on how ugly the campaign had
been.
Donald
Trump, expressing equal confidence, barnstormed across the country
vowing to win Election Day, fundamentally change the country’s path and
make his supporters’ dreams come true.
Both candidates’ promises culminated in a pair of rallies held in the wee hours of Tuesday morning.
Speaking
at 1 a.m. at North Carolina State University, Clinton shouted over the
deafening cheers and foot-stomping of thousands of young supporters, who
had been warmed up with performances by Lady Gaga and Jon Bon Jovi —
including a duet of “Livin’ on a Prayer.”
“This is sure worth staying up for,” she said, taking in the crowd.
The Clintons and the Obamas at a rally at Independence Mall in Philadelphia. (Photo: Andrew Harnik/AP)
“Tomorrow
night this election will end, but I want you to understand, our work
together will be just beginning,” Clinton said. “We have to bridge the
divides in this country. As the Bible says, we have to repair the
breaches.”
It
was a lesson Clinton hammered home again and again on her final day on
the trail as she cast herself as a leader who could heal the nation
after a long and brutal campaign. “We have so much divisiveness right
now,” she said at a rally near Grand Rapids, Mich. “We have to start
listening to each other.”
She reminded her supporters that she wanted to be the president for “everyone,” not just those who vote for her.
“I
regret deeply how angry the tone of the campaign became,” Clinton said
at the largest event of her entire candidacy: another Monday rally with
the Obamas and Bruce Springsteen that drew 33,000 people to Independence
Mall in Philadelphia.
A supporter screamed out, “Not your fault!” Clinton laughed.
Meanwhile,
Trump took the stage at 12:30 a.m. in Grand Rapids, Mich., in a setting
that was typical of any other one of his rallies this season: a
sterile, bright convention hall, featuring a simple stage with an
American flag, a bleacher full of people behind him and a podium.
Donald Trump points to the crowd as he arrives to speak at a rally in Grand Rapids, Mich. (Photo: Evan Vucci/AP)
Two
hours earlier, Trump had appeared at what his campaign had originally
envisioned as his send-off to his unlikely bid for the presidency: a
large arena rally in downtown Manchester, N.H., surrounded by thousands
of people, including his family, and a stage marked by laser lights and a
fog machine.
But
in the waning days of the campaign, as Trump sought to find a path to
270 electoral votes, his campaign added a last-minute stop here in
Michigan, hoping to turn a traditional blue state red for the first time
since 1988. It was the ninth state he visited in a little over 24
hours.
“If
you think you’re going to get a regular speech at 1 a.m., you’re
crazy,” Trump declared as he took the stage. But that’s exactly what the
GOP nominee gave: the same stump speech he’s been giving for weeks.
Introduced
by his running mate, Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, the GOP nominee attacked
“crooked” Hillary Clinton as a slave to special interests. He called her
a corrupt politician whose use of a private email server is likely to
spawn investigations that will stymie her potential presidency.
Supporters listen as Indiana Gov. Mike Pence speaks to a campaign rally in Manchester, N.H. (Photo: Charles Krupa/AP)
In
contrast, he cast himself as a change agent who could blow up a corrupt
system who could turn the nation’s focus back to helping struggling
blue-collar workers whose jobs have been gutted by American companies
moving overseas.
Echoing
the message that launched his once unlikely White House bid more than a
year ago, Trump reiterated his promise to undo trade deals like the
Trans-Pacific Partnership and NAFTA. His pitch was clearly aimed at
stirring up workers in what is one of the more conservative parts of the
state.
“The
corrupt politicians and their special interests have ruled over this
country for a very long time,” Trump declared, reading from prepared
remarks. “Today is our independence day. Today the American working
class is going to strike back finally.”
“We are hours away from once-in-a-lifetime change,” he said.
But Trump being Trump, he couldn’t resist breaking from the script.
And he did so repeatedly, again attacking Clinton for campaigning with
celebrities in the days leading up to Election Day. The former reality
television star suggested her decision to campaign with Jay Z and Beyoncé was “demeaning” to the political process.
“We
don’t need Jay Z or Beyoncé. We don’t need Jon Bon Jovi. We don’t need
Lady Gaga. All we need is great ideas to make America great again.
That’s all that we need,” Trump said.
But
the event offered some embarrassing optics for Trump, who is banking on
the support of his faithful followers to propel him to the White House.
Almost as soon as the candidate took the stage, hundreds of the few
thousand supporters on hand began filing out of the room.
They
passed through an exit lane directly in front of the press corps,
staring at reporters across a barricade as if they were on exhibit.
Questioned why they were exiting, some pointed to the late hour, while
others said they were trying to beat traffic. Some said they’d seen
enough.
But
Trump pressed on. He declared imminent victory, pointing to the 16
primary challengers he’d defeated when many wrote off his candidacy as a
joke. He said he had trust in his supporters to turn out for him. “I
know my people,” he said, adding, “If we win Michigan, we win this
historic election.”
Hillary
Clinton, Chelsea Clinton and musician Lady Gaga greet members of the
audience after speaking at a midnight rally in Raleigh, N.C. (Photo:
Andrew Harnik/AP)
Clinton’s
jubilant final day sounded a lighter note than either Trump’s or the
final slog of the general election, in which Clinton weathered the storm
of her campaign chair John Podesta’s email inbox being made public by a cyberattack.
She
took a dominating lead in the final weeks of the race, but the race
tightened in the closing stretch. Ten days before Election Day, FBI
Director James Comey announced that he would review new emails that appeared “pertinent”
to the bureau’s investigation of the private email server Clinton
exclusively used while secretary of state. The surprise twist injected
Trump’s candidacy with a shot of adrenaline.
But Clinton has since rebounded a bit in the polls, though it’s still a close race: As of Tuesday morning, the RealClearPolitics average of national surveys had her up 3 points over Trump. And Comey announced Sunday that investigators had reviewed the emails and found nothing to change his conclusion from last July that neither Clinton nor her aides should face charges.
With
these hurdles behind her, victory — and what comes next — appeared to
be on Clinton’s mind Monday. The Democratic nominee answered a question
from entertainer Ryan Seacrest on his radio show that morning about
whether she expected to speak to Trump if she wins. “Oh, absolutely,”
she said. “I hope that he will, if I’m successful, play a constructive
role in … coming together — bring people who supported him to the table
so that we can have the kind of national conversation we should have.”
Huma Abedin greets supporters on the tarmac as she arrives on Hillary
Clinton’s campaign plane in White Plains, N.Y. (Photo: Andrew Harnik/AP)
Huma
Abedin greets supporters on the tarmac as she arrives on Hillary
Clinton’s campaign plane in White Plains, N.Y. (Photo: Andrew Harnik/AP)
Clinton
brought her longtime aide Huma Abedin back on the trail for the first
time since Comey’s announcement. Abedin’s estranged husband, Anthony
Weiner, was the source of the new emails, which the FBI reportedly found while investigating whether he sent lewd messages
to an underage girl. On Monday night, Abedin was spotted on Clinton’s
plane flying between Philadelphia and Raleigh, the same leg that Jon Bon
Jovi jumped on for as well.
The
Clintons appeared to be in high spirits aboard their plane after the
Philadelphia event. Clinton’s press corps shouted questions at her and
former President Bill Clinton from their cabin in the back of the plane.
Both Clintons pretended not to hear the reporters, with Hillary Clinton
playfully cupping her hand over her ear before turning back and taking
her seat.
When
she landed in Westchester County at 3:30 a.m. after the marathon final
day, Clinton was greeted by hundreds of staffers and supporters who had
waited for her on the cold tarmac. “Welcome home!” they chanted, before
she emerged from her “Stronger Together”-branded plane to the theme of
“Fight Song.” Clinton shook hands and said hellos for a few minutes as
Secret Service agents and her aides, including Abedin, shadowed her. The
Democratic nominee turned away from the crowd and gave Podesta a big
hug, as if to thank him for something.
She then got into her car and was whisked away to her home.
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