Clinton, Trump kick off their race to election finish

Clinton, Trump kick off their race to election finish

Clinton, Trump kick off their race to election finish

U.S. Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton greets flight crew and others before boarding her newly unveiled campaign plane for the first time at the Westchester County Airport in White Plains, New York, U.S., September 5, 2016. REUTERS photo

Rivals Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump sprinted out of the campaign blocks on Sept. 5 to begin their two-month dash to the U.S. presidential election, descending on Ohio as ground zero of their 2016 battle.

The candidates used Labor Day - the traditional launch of the home stretch of the presidential campaign - to push their arguments that they would be best for working-class Americans.

Democrat Clinton maintains an edge over Trump in national polls, has dramatically deeper ground operations in swing states, and trounced Trump in August fundraising.

But the Republican flagbearer’s unorthodox White House bid, including his campaign’s apparent imperviousness to criticism about his harsh rhetoric, assures a tight contest for the next 64 days.

“I’m not taking anybody, anywhere for granted,” Clinton told a crowd of more than 1,000 at a picnic in Cleveland.

Highlighting the intensity of the fight for battleground states like Ohio, Trump was already on the ground in Cleveland for his own campaign events when Clinton landed, their planes parking about two football fields apart on the tarmac.

“I’m ready. I’m more than ready,” she said of the intense two-month battle ahead as she attempts to become the first female US commander in chief.

But after a few days of rest from campaigning, Clinton coughed her way through portions of her Cleveland remarks.

Suffering one of her worst coughing bouts of the race, she paused to sip water, her voice reduced to a crackling whisper at times.

That’s sure to fuel critics’ claims that Clinton, 68, has serious health problems. Clinton dismissed such “conspiracy theories,” saying her coughing was just from seasonal allergies. Clinton debuted her new campaign plane - with the slogan “Stronger Together” emblazoned on the side - and brought the press corps aboard her jet for the first time.

Under extensive criticism from her rival and journalists for not holding a full press conference in nine months, she answered questions for more than 22 minutes on several topics, including tensions with Russia over accusations of cyber-espionage.

On Sept. 5, Trump followed Clinton’s lead, inviting some journalists aboard his private jet where he discussed his immigration platform.

Just a week after traveling to Mexico for his first international trip as the nominee, and then returning across the U.S. border to deliver a nativist immigration speech, he assailed Clinton for having “no plan” on immigration.

“What her real plan is, she has total amnesty” and a pathway to citizenship, he said, reiterating his opposition to such a legalization process without undocumented immigrants leaving the country first.
Under Clinton, “people can pour across the border and it doesn’t matter who the people are.”
   
Clinton shot back by recalling Trump’s meeting with Mexico’s President Enrique Pena Nieto and their clash over Trump’s plan to have Mexico pay for a border wall.

Trump “can’t even go to a friendly foreign country without getting into a fight,” she said during a campaign stop in Hampton, Illinois.

Trump, who visited a Cleveland diner to meet with union members, is seeking to capitalize on simmering frustration among blue-collar workers over jobs and wages.

He and his running mate Mike Pence also dropped in on the Canfield County Fair in working class eastern Ohio, where several attendees clapped and chanted Trump’s name.