Hilary Clinton and Donald Trump on Labor Day barnstormed through
America’s industrial heartland appealing to workers with promises of
better-paying jobs and a return to prosperity -- in a White House race
so narrow now that their entourages shared the same airport tarmac and
roadway in battleground Ohio.
“It's kind of interesting to have all the planes here
on the same tarmac. Just shows you how important Ohio is. We're going
to be here a lot," Democratic vice-presidential nominee Virginia Gov.
Tim Kaine told Clinton after she flew into Cleveland, using a campaign
plane for the first time this election cycle.
Clinton used the plane -- a Boeing 737 with about 100
seats for passengers and crew -- to take several questions from some of
the roughly 40 reporters onboard, amid criticism she is largely
avoiding the news media.
She addressed the issue of saying dozens of times
that she couldn’t recall specific information or events when the FBI
interviewed her last month about her use of a private computer server
while secretary of state, according to recently released FBI notes.
“The fact that I couldn’t remember certain meetings
doesn’t affect the commitment I had to the treatment of classified
material,” Clinton said.
She also said she was “really concerned” about recent
reports and other indications that the Russian government might be
trying to interfere with the White House race.
And she said she was unaware that aides had erased 23 days of emails, after revelations about the private server became public.
By the end of the day, Clinton and her Democratic
presidential team made stops in Illinois, Michigan, New Hampshire, Ohio
and Pennsylvania.
Meanwhile, Trump, the Republican presidential
nominee, and running-mate Indiana Gov. Mike Pence made four stops in
Ohio, where recent polls show Trump now trailing by less than 2
percentage points.
“You see the crowds,” Trump told Fox News at a fair in Canfield, Ohio. “We're going to bring jobs back.”
Clinton got off to a rough start at her first event,
in Cleveland, suffering through a coughing spell, telling supporters,
“Every time I think about Trump I get allergic.”
“If Tim and I are elected, we’re going to stop the
attacks on unions,” continued Clinton, who was joined on stage by
AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka. “We’re going to bring jobs back to
Ohio.”
Earlier in the day, Kaine teamed up with Vice
President Biden at Pittsburgh’s annual Labor Day parade, in the Clinton
campaign’s effort to ensure union support turns into union votes in
November.
“We have to make sure labor is right there with us,”
said Kaine, arguing organized labor’s efforts have increased wages for
all U.S. workers. “Nobody understands team work like organized labor.”
Biden took the stage next, telling the crowd: “I work for Hillary Clinton. … Unions have built this country.”
Former President Bill Clinton made stops in Detroit
and Cincinnati, while Clinton primary rival Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders
campaigned for her in New Hampshire.
The Clinton-Trump race has gotten closer over the past weeks, according to recent polls.
The RealClearPolitics polls average shows Clinton
leading Trump by roughly 4 percentage points, compared to about 8 points
in mid-August.
Her numbers dropped amid the FBI report and more
revelations about the level of access Clinton Foundation donors had to
the State Department while and after Clinton ran the agency from 2009 to
2013.
However, Trump also trails in essentially all of the
of so-called battleground states that will largely decide the race --
including Colorado, Florida, Ohio, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and
Virginia.
Clinton unveiled the campaign plane amid criticism
she has not held a full-fledged press conference in roughly 275 days to
talks about the emails, the foundation and other issues.
At Trump and Pence’s first stop, a round-table
discussion with union members, Trump, a wealthy businessman, warned that
America's manufacturing jobs are "going to hell."
Trump also appeared with Democratic Mayor Tom Coyne,
of Brook Park, Ohio, who said he supported Trump in this spring's
Republican primary and would vote for him this fall.
"The mayor today is just one example of what's
happening across this country," Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway
said. "Voters who traditionally have not voted Republican or haven't
even voted in a very long time seem to be coming out to support this
messenger and this message."
As he left Cleveland for his next stop in Youngstown,
Trump extended a rare invitation to a handful of journalists on his
private jet, and said that "on occasion," he will invite journalists to
travel with him.
"It doesn't have to be all the time," he added.
No Republican has won the White House without winning
Ohio and Trump is trying to overcome some splintering in the state
party, which was supportive of Ohio Gov. John Kasich during the
presidential primary.
While Labor Day has traditionally been the kickoff to
the fall campaign, both Clinton and Trump have been locked in an
intense back-and-forth throughout the summer.
Clinton has questioned Trump's temperament and
preparation to serve as commander in chief while seeking to connect the
reality television star to the extreme "alt-right" movement within the
Republican Party.
Trump visited a predominantly black church in Detroit
on Saturday in a rare appearance with minority voters, aiming to
counter Clinton's argument to moderate and suburban voters that he has
allowed a racist fringe to influence his candidacy.
The start of full-fledged campaigning opens a pivotal
month, culminating in the first presidential debate on Sept. 26 at
Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York. Polls show Trump trailing
Clinton in a series of must-win battleground states, meaning the debates
could be his best chance at reorienting the race.
Clinton will have millions of dollars at her disposal
this fall to air television advertising and power a sophisticated
get-out-the vote operation in key states.
The former secretary of state raised a combined $143
million in August for her campaign, the Democratic National Committee
and state parties -- her best month yet.
She began September with more than $68 million in her
campaign's bank account to use against Trump, who has not yet released
initial fundraising totals for August.