Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton are facing off Wednesday in their third presidential debate with the Republican nominee looking to launch a comeback after sliding to his lowest point yet in the polls.
With 20 days to go before the election, the rivals are in Las Vegas, making the most of their last chance to make their cases to millions of voters on television, in the final big night of the wild 2016 general election campaign.
The debate began on a frosty note as the candidates once again abandoned the tradition of shaking each others hands at the outset. The opening exchanges were dominated by a sober exchange about the Supreme Court and gun rights.
Clinton said the court should “stand on the side of the American people, not on the side of powerful corporations and the wealthy.”
Trump said that the Supreme Court is “what it is all about” and rebuked liberal Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg for recent remarks in which she criticized him, before apologizing. He warned that if Clinton was President, she would gut Americans’ Second Amendment right to bear arms.
“If my opponent should win this race, which I don’t think will happen,” Trump said, the Second Amendment will be a “small replica of what we have now.”
Clinton denied that she opposes the Second Amendment but called for firearms legislation that included comprehensive background checks, and efforts to close the so-called gunshow loophole.
The back-and-forth unfolded in a respectful atmosphere, strikingly different from the furious jabs that immediately flew between the two rivals during the first two debates.
Consolidating her position
Clinton is seeking 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 counterattack from a foe who has proven in past debates that there’s no line he won’t cross.
Since the second presidential debate, Trump has faced a string of accusations of sexual assault, all of which he has branded as lies. He also made an accusation that no candidate in modern times has dared to level — that the election is rigged against him.
The GOP nominee has repeatedly lashed out at House Speaker Paul Ryan, whom he believes is not giving him the support he deserves. As a result, Trump has declared himself “unshackled” and intends to close out his campaign free from an obligation to toe the Republican line.
He’s said that Clinton should be forced to take a drug test before their final debate clash, and doubled down on his vow to put her in jail if he is elected.
Aaron Kall, editor of a new book that analyzes Trump’s primary debate performances, points out that his aggressive showing in the last debate in St. Louis — one of the most acrimonious moments in recent US political history — came when he was still somewhat restrained.
“Now he is unshackled, what does he have to lose?” Kall said, adding that he expected Trump to be on offense most of the night.
First two debates
But Trump can’t afford to replicate his performances in the first two debates, when he was diverted from his most potent attacks on trade and the economy, by traps laid by Clinton or her jabs at his personality and business record.
Trump, down eight points in the latest CNN Poll of Polls, is almost out of time to launch what would be one of the most remarkable comebacks of modern times. A new edition of the CNN Electoral Map on Wednesday moved two key swing states, Florida and Nevada, to “lean Democrat.” Two states that have voted almost exclusively Republican for decades, Utah and Arizona, are now considered battlegrounds.
“Nothing he does in 90 minutes is going to cause a dramatic impact and all of the polls are going to be tied again,” said Kall, director of debate at the University of Michigan. “But the first step is to have a good debate — and the media loves a comeback story.”
Like Trump, Clinton has choices to make.
Does the Democratic nominee seek to protect her lead with only three weeks to go in the race, or will she slug it out with Trump in a nasty, personal confrontation, as she did during the first two debates?
Clinton could try to hover above the fray, portraying herself as a president-elect in waiting, and seek to make the kind of emotional and philosophical connection she has yet to really forge with the American people through decades on the political stage and a grueling campaign that has dragged on for over a year and a half.
Such an approach might enable Clinton to begin to build political momentum for her transition and early months of her presidency if she wins on November 8, but could also open her to charges of complacency before she has closed Trump out.
CNN’s Jeff Zeleny reported that Clinton will try to stay out of the mud Trump is likely to fling in order to start to repair her image with voters in the face of her high disapproval ratings with an eye on her presidency, should she win on November 8.
“If we are in the mud with him until Election Day,” one Clinton aide said, “it will make the process even harder.”