Campaign trying to keep momentum

PENSACOLA, FLORIDA: Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump looks at the crowd as he arrives to a campaign rally on Wednesday. — AP PENSACOLA, FLORIDA: Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump looks at the crowd as he arrives to a campaign rally on Wednesday. — AP

WASHINGTON: With Election Day in sight, Donald Trump tried again for the discipline and restraint that has eluded him for months, hoping not to blow a burst of momentum that has him closing on Hillary Clinton. Clinton and her allies, meanwhile, are doing her best to trip up Trump.

The candidates were slated to take their tussle to Florida and North Carolina yesterday, two lynchpins in Trump’s plan to take the White House. With five days before Election Day, the unconventional Republican candidate was hewing closer to convention, running some upbeat ads, bringing out his wife for a rare campaign appearance and trying, publicly, not to veer off-message.

“‘Stay on point, Donald, stay on point,’” Trump teasingly quoted his staff as saying, as he campaigned Wednesday in Florida. “No sidetracks, Donald. Nice and easy. Nice and easy.’” Melania Trump was scheduled to campaign in Pennsylvania Thursday, her first turn on the trail since the Republican convention in July.

The former model will try to counter the Clinton campaign’s pounding attacks on Trump as anti-woman, a strategy Democrats see as the best hope for rattling the Republican opponent and driving female voters away from him. Clinton took that message to a massive audience Wednesday night during the final game of the World Series. The Democrats aired a series of attack ads that highlighted Trump’s lewd comments about women. Trump’s advertising was a mix of positive and negative spots, including one promising “a future brighter than our past.”

Clinton campaign tactics

The Clinton campaign is trying to keep Trump’s history of vulgar and disparaging statements about women, minorities and people with disabilities fresh in voters’ minds as they head to the polls. Among those conveying that message for Clinton is President Barack Obama, who was due to campaign in Florida on Thursday, as Clinton headed to North Carolina for rallies in Raleigh and Winterville.

Trump can’t win the election without carrying Florida, underscoring how narrow his path to the White House is. Trump campaigned in three Florida cities Wednesday - Miami, Orlando and Pensacola - and will follow up with a stop in Jacksonville. “We don’t want to blow this,” he told rowdy supporters in Miami. “We gotta win. We gotta win big.” Despite tightening polls, Clinton still has more options, which was underscored by her decision to make a late stop Wednesday in reliably Republican Arizona. “This state is in play for the first time in years,” Clinton exclaimed during a nighttime rally on the campus of Arizona State University. She was greeted by a boisterous crowd of 15,000, one of her largest of the campaign.

Clinton’s campaign has been eyeing Arizona for weeks, given Trump’s unpopularity with Hispanic voters. Clinton painted a grim view of life for Hispanics under a Trump administration. She also waded into a local sheriff’s race getting national attention, backing Democrat Paul Penzone for Maricopa County sheriff, a post held by immigration hardliner Joe Arpaio. But Clinton’s hopes for a landslide appear to be fading. Polls showing Trump closing in on her in battleground states, including some where Clinton has led for weeks. A pro-Clinton group was spending more than $1 million on Michigan airwaves along with at least $1 million more in Colorado, a state where Clinton has enjoyed a significant polling advantage for much of the fall. Former President Bill Clinton made an unannounced appearance in Detroit Wednesday night to meet privately with black ministers, the city’s mayor and other local leaders. Hillary Clinton planned to travel to the Detroit area on Friday. Early voting numbers in some states suggest that her challenge stems, at least in part, from underwhelming support from African-American voters. That could complicate her path in other states, too, including North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Michigan. Early voting in North Carolina shows a 5 percentage point drop in ballots from black voters from 2012. Obama, the nation’s first black president, offered an urgent message to North Carolina voters on Wednesday: “The fate of the republic rests on your shoulders.” — AP