Trump, Clinton gear up for final showdown
Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton meet in Las Vegas Wednesday for one last throw of the dice.
They are poised for another clash in the third presidential debate, which will be their final chance to change the trajectory of the election as millions of viewers tune in for the last big televised spectacular of a rancorous campaign.
Trump is under intense pressure to use the debate, just 20 days before Election Day, as a springboard for a comeback after a slide in the polls that started after Clinton's victory in the first debate and leaves him a heavy underdog.
Clinton will seek to consolidate her strong position, knowing that a winning performance could help close out Trump. But she is facing a barrage of new attacks following an avalanche of hacked emails released over the past week from WikiLeaks. She is bracing for a ferocious counter-attack from a foe who has proven in past debates that there's no line he won't cross.
What we've learned from the hacked emails of Hillary Clinton's campaign (so far)
One of the first questions about the debate will be answered before it even gets under way: Will the bitter rivals even shake hands?
Hours before the the last debate in St. Louis 10 days ago, Trump appeared with women who had accused former President Bill Clinton of sexual assault, in a bid to insulate himself against a controversy over his sexually aggressive language revealed on a decade-old "Access Hollywood" video tape. His stunt led to a frosty opening with no exchange of pleasantries between the party nominees.
In any normal presidential race, the candidate who is behind -- in this case Trump -- would show up at the debate and try to mitigate the temperamental vulnerabilities that contributed to the campaign's slipping poll numbers and show a more presidential demeanor.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mdAMmReMyrA
Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton meet in Las Vegas Wednesday for one last throw of the dice.
They are poised for another clash in the third presidential debate, which will be their final chance to change the trajectory of the election as millions of viewers tune in for the last big televised spectacular of a rancorous campaign.
Trump is under intense pressure to use the debate, just 20 days before Election Day, as a springboard for a comeback after a slide in the polls that started after Clinton's victory in the first debate and leaves him a heavy underdog.
Clinton will seek to consolidate her strong position, knowing that a winning performance could help close out Trump. But she is facing a barrage of new attacks following an avalanche of hacked emails released over the past week from WikiLeaks. She is bracing for a ferocious counter-attack from a foe who has proven in past debates that there's no line he won't cross.
What we've learned from the hacked emails of Hillary Clinton's campaign (so far)
One of the first questions about the debate will be answered before it even gets under way: Will the bitter rivals even shake hands?
Hours before the the last debate in St. Louis 10 days ago, Trump appeared with women who had accused former President Bill Clinton of sexual assault, in a bid to insulate himself against a controversy over his sexually aggressive language revealed on a decade-old "Access Hollywood" video tape. His stunt led to a frosty opening with no exchange of pleasantries between the party nominees.
In any normal presidential race, the candidate who is behind -- in this case Trump -- would show up at the debate and try to mitigate the temperamental vulnerabilities that contributed to the campaign's slipping poll numbers and show a more presidential demeanor.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mdAMmReMyrA

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