Reuters - Democrat
Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump battled over the strength of the
economy in the final stretch of their race for the White House on Friday, with
Clinton praising the latest U.S. jobs report and Trump dismissing it as a
fraudulent disaster.
With four
days left in an often bitter contest that has tightened in the last week, each
candidate attacked the other as unfit to be president in a late push for votes
in battleground states that could decide the
outcome in Tuesday's election.
Clinton
leads Trump by 5 percentage points, according to a Reuters/Ipsos tracking poll
released on Friday, maintaining her advantage in the national survey even as
the race tightens in several crucial swing states.
In the Oct.
30-Nov. 3 opinion poll, 44 percent of likely voters supported Clinton while 39
percent supported Trump.
Clinton
wrapped up her day of campaigning with a nighttime concert in Cleveland
headlined by rapper Jay Z. He was joined by rappers Big Sean, Chance the
Rapper, and J. Cole, and by his wife, popular singer Beyonce, as a surprise
guest.
"We
have unfinished work to do, more barriers to break, and with your help, a glass
ceiling to crack once and for all," Clinton said at the concert.
At his final
rally of the day in Pennsylvania, Trump mocked Clinton for her celebrity
supporters. "I am here all by myself. Just me, no guitar, no piano, no
nothing," he said.
Earlier in
the day at a rally in Pittsburgh, Clinton cited the government's latest jobs
report as evidence of the economy's strength. The report showed higher wages
for workers as well as the creation of 161,000 jobs in October and a dip in the
unemployment rate to 4.9 percent from 5 percent.
"I
believe our economy is poised to really take off and thrive," Clinton told
the gathering, after being introduced by billionaire investor Mark Cuban.
"When the middle class thrives, America thrives."
Trump
disputed Clinton's rosy view, telling a crowd in New Hampshire that the jobs
report was "an absolute disaster" and was skewed by the large number
of people who have stopped looking for jobs and are no longer in the labor
market.
"Nobody
believes the numbers anyway. The numbers they put out are phony," he said,
referring to the figures released by the U.S. Labor Department.
The economy
and the candidates' competing visions for the future could be critical in
swaying voters in ailing Rust Belt states like Ohio, Pennsylvania and Michigan.
Both
candidates made stops in Ohio and Pennsylvania on Friday, with Trump adding a
stop in New Hampshire and Clinton adding one in Michigan. Each of those states
is key in the state-by-state quest for the 270 electoral votes needed to win
the White House.
TIGHTENING
POLLS
The race has
tightened significantly in the past week, as several swing states that are
considered must-wins for Trump shifted from favoring Clinton to toss-ups,
according to the Reuters/Ipsos States of the Nation project.
The two
candidates are now tied in Florida and North Carolina, and Clinton’s lead in
Michigan has narrowed so much that the state is too close to call. Ohio remains
a dead heat, and Clinton has a slight lead in Pennsylvania.
Clinton is
still the favorite to win Tuesday's election, with a clearer path to winning of
the Electoral College. But Trump now has a plausible route to victory,
especially if there is a sharp fall in turnout among African-Americans from the
levels of the 2012 election.
Trump, a New
York businessman and former reality TV star, has made a pitch for blue-collar
workers who have been angered by free-trade deals and feel abandoned by
Washington. But his protectionist rhetoric - he has promised to review trade
agreements - appears to be having mixed success in the Rust Belt.
Reuters/Ipsos
polling from mid-October found a majority in both Ohio and Pennsylvania believe
that international trade benefits Americans by keeping the cost of goods low,
although they also think it hurts "average Americans" by depressing
wages and causing job losses at home.
Clinton appears
to be leading among labor union households in both states, the poll found. She
has a double-digit lead with women in both, while Trump has a more modest lead
with men. Among whites, Trump has a 7-point lead over Clinton in Ohio and a
3-point lead over Clinton in Pennsylvania.
In the final
stretch, the two candidates continued to paint a dire scenario of life in the
United States if their opponent captures the White House. Trump said the FBI's
fresh examination of emails that may be related to Clinton's use of a private
email server for government work while she was secretary of state could lead to
"a constitutional crisis."
"Aren't
we tired of all this stuff?" he asked. "America deserves a government
that can go to work on Day One."
GET-OUT-THE-VOTE
PUSH
Clinton
suggested the volatile Trump, who has feuded with and insulted a wide array of
people and groups including Muslims, Mexican immigrants and women, was too
unpredictable to trust.
"Think
about what it would mean to entrust the nuclear codes to someone with very thin
skin who lashes out at anyone who insults him," she said.
Clinton has
deployed high-profile supporters to campaign for her in the final days of the
long race.
President
Barack Obama praised her work as his first-term top diplomat during an
appearance in North Carolina.
“She was
outstanding in her job. She was loyal to me,” he said. Obama is trying to
energize African-Americans, with whom he is very popular, and young people to
turn out for Clinton the way they did for him in 2008 and 2012.
Hispanic
groups in swing states cranked up their get-out-the-vote efforts for the final
stretch of the race on Friday, hoping to push the contest Clinton's way.
Reuters
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1 Comments
This contest is dirtier than Nigeria politics.
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