While Clinton is banking on star power to lock in her narrow poll lead, hosting weekend pop concerts with Beyonce and Katy Perry, Trump has embarked on a cross-country blitz through Iowa, Minnesota, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Florida, North Carolina and New Hampshire.
Clinton and Trump — along with their surrogates — crisscrossed battleground states in their final push to rally voters and announced additional stops till late Monday.
Clinton, 69, would deliver her final address at a mid-night rally in Raleigh, North Carolina.
“Clinton will lay out her plans to create an economy that works for everyone, not just those at the top, and her vision for an America that is stronger together,” her campaign said.
However, a bigger rally has been reserved for earlier in the night when Clintons — Hillary and Bill — would be joined by the Barack and Michelle Obama in Philadelphia. They will also be joined at the event by Jon Bon Jovi, who will perform.
Clinton will urge Pennsylvanians to elect her president on Tuesday and continue pushing for the “American ideals of progress, inclusion, equality and strength,” that were enshrined in the Constitution in 1787, it said in a statement.
“Along with President Obama, she will also lay out how the division and dangerous views espoused by Donald Trump in his campaign make him unqualified, unfit and unworthy to lead this great nation,” it said.
Encouraged by the polling figures, Trump, 70, also announced several new stops, including the Democratic stronghold like Minnesota.
“We’re going into what they used to call Democrat strongholds where we’re now either tied or leading. We’re going to Minnesota, which traditionally has not been Republican at all, and we’re doing phenomenally. We just saw a poll. We’re going to Colorado, where we’re doing phenomenally well. We’re doing well everywhere,” Trump said.
In a security scare, Trump was bundled off stage by Secret Service agents at a rally in Nevada after someone in the crowd shouted “gun” which led to a commotion.
A Secret Service spokesperson said in a statement that there was commotion in the crowd at the rally here when an “unidentified individual” shouted “gun,” though no weapon was found after a “thorough search”.
Clinton (44 per cent) and Trump (43 per cent) are in a fierce battle among likely voters nationally — including those who are undecided yet leaning towards a candidate or who have already voted, McClatchy-Marist poll said.
In September, Clinton led Trump by six percentage points in the same poll. .
PTI