Clinton camp on war footing for Trump election result challenge

Hillary Clinton's campaign is increasingly preparing for the possibility that Republican rival Donald Trump may never concede the US presidential election should she win.

Clinton camp on war footing for Trump election result challenge

Hillary Clinton's campaign is increasingly preparing for the possibility that Republican rival Donald Trump may never concede the US presidential election should she win.

That scenario could enormously complicate the crucial early weeks of Democrat Mrs Clinton's preparations to take office.

Aiming to undermine any argument brash billionaire businessman Mr Trump may make about a "rigged" election on November 8, she hopes to roll up a large electoral vote margin when Americans go to the polls, which could repudiate his message and project a governing mandate after the bitter, divisive presidential race.

Mrs Clinton's team is also keeping a close eye on statements by national Republican leaders, predicting they could play an important role in how Mr Trump's accusations of electoral fraud might be perceived, according to several Clinton campaign aides.

Campaign officials stress they are not taking the outcome of the election for granted, but Mrs Clinton and her team have begun thinking about how to position their candidate during the post-election period.

Long one of America's most polarising political figures, former US secretary of state Mrs Clinton has begun telling audiences she will need their help in healing the country.

"I've got to figure out how we heal these divides," she said in a Friday interview with Tampa, Florida, radio station WBTP.

"We've got to get together. Maybe that's a role that is meant to be for my presidency if I'm so fortunate to be there."

A refusal by Mr Trump to accept the election results would not only upend a basic tenet of American democracy, but also force Mrs Clinton to create a new playbook for handling the transfer of power.

And a narrow victory would make it more difficult for her to claim substantial political capital at the start of her administration.

"Donald is still going to whine if he loses. But if the mandate is clear, I don't think many people will follow him," Virginia senator Tim Kaine, Mrs Clinton's running mate, told CNN's New Day.

While Mrs Clinton's campaign has long focused on maintaining pathways to cross the threshold of 270 electoral votes, it is now looking to capture an expanded number of states that could also help determine control of the US Senate - including Republican-leaning Arizona.

Polls indicate Mrs Clinton has extended her advantage in several toss-up states during the three presidential debates, giving her campaign more confidence.

She has maintained stable leads in states such as Pennsylvania, Virginia and Colorado, as well as a narrow edge in Florida and North Carolina.

"They're looking at it like this: we've got these doors of opportunity open, let's make sure we go down all of them," said Jeremy Bird, national field director for President Barack Obama's 2012 campaign, who is helping Mrs Clinton's team.

If Mrs Clinton wins the White House, she will enter as one of the least popular first-term presidents in generations.

While Mr Trump has suffered from high unfavourable ratings, particularly among women, Mrs Clinton has been hampered by polls showing more than half of the public considers her to be untrustworthy.

But some Republicans are already preparing for Mr Trump's defeat, downplaying the significance of a Clinton triumph.

"On November 8, Clinton's claims of a mandate will fly in the face of reality. She only won by not being Trump," tweeted conservative writer Erick Erickson.

Rolling up a big victory in the Electoral College would let Mrs Clinton push back against that notion and assert that voters had rejected what she has called Mr Trump's mean, divisive message.

In a race against Mr Trump and independents Gary Johnson and Jill Stein, Mrs Clinton may struggle to reach 50% of the vote.

But competing in states such as Arizona and pushing for Senate victories in Missouri and Indiana might help Democrats in their quest to recapture the Senate and give her a better chance of surpassing Mr Obama's 332 electoral votes in the 2012 campaign.

Mrs Clinton's campaign is making a significant push in Arizona, which offers 11 electoral votes and has stayed in the Republican column in all but one presidential election since 1952.

Bill Clinton was the last Democrat to carry the state, in 1996.

First lady Michelle Obama courted voters in Phoenix on Thursday, following appearances by Vermont senator Bernie Sanders and the Clintons' daughter Chelsea.

The campaign is spending two million dollars in advertising and toying with sending Mrs Clinton herself there before election day.

"I think it's clear that Hillary Clinton has a chance to win Arizona just like her husband (former president Bill Clinton) did 20 years ago," said Rodd McLeod, a Phoenix-based Democratic strategist who helped Mrs Clinton's campaign during the primary.

Two other Republican-leaning states could prove tempting.

Georgia, which has had an influx of diverse voters in the Atlanta area, is considered a future battleground state, with many Democrats comparing it to North Carolina.

And Utah overwhelmingly supported Mitt Romney, the nation's first Mormon presidential nominee, with more than 72% in 2012.

But many of Utah's Republicans have abandoned Mr Trump and polls show Mrs Clinton and Mr Trump in a tight contest against independent Evan McMullin, a conservative former CIA officer who graduated from Brigham Young University.

If Mr McMullin captures Utah, he will be the first independent presidential candidate to win electoral votes since George Wallace in 1968.

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