and for all that, yes, love trumps hate. let s get out and vote! philadelphia, tomorrow! let s make history together! thank you and god bless you! hillary clinton speaking in what will not be her final election rally but it certainly will be her biggest. there s about 20,000 people on site there at independence hall in philadelphia for the first event of its kind. you see there hillary clinton along with the president, barack obama, along with the first lady, michelle obama and, of course, joined by her husband, former president bill clinton and her daughter chelsea clinton. we ve seen campaigning by all of those other four people for hillary clinton during this
a politics junkie and like the history of politics on tv, it might sound like it was kind of awesome but it was not awesome, having watched a number of those eight hours of election eve telethons from 1968, i m a person who loves political history but watching it i wanted to stab myself in the eye. and so it s funny. in the television era, we went for a long time with election eve, this night every four years, this night every four years, being super long format, boring, weird, expensive, semifake, semiscripted endurance contests by the presidential candidates on live tv. it s fascinating to me that in this particularly television-driven campaign, the first presidential campaign where one of the candidates is a tv celebrity. the candidates have gone old school. they have gone premodern. they are each running a slightly longer than usual closing argument ad, they will run a
what we re seeing in nevada and place the like florida, you know, hillary s closing set to that katy perry song, you re k going to hear us roar, that s what you re going to hear collectively across america, and that roar is going to be their votes. thanks for being with us late night on election eve. we ll talk to you soon, senator, thank you. as we look at the way the campaigns are spending their last days t . it is interesting to see them in michigan and pennsylvania many ea early voting has become so popular that we have about 60%, 70% of the vote in, in swing states like florida, nevada, north carolina. there s so much early voting that for the candidates to go to those places now, they re competing for essentially a small portion of the vote that s
it s hard to believe. and everybody s reading about the disaster taking place in minnesota. everybody s reading about it. you don t even have the right to talk about it. you have no idea who s coming in. you have no idea. you ll find out, you ll find out. a lot of people have been talking about how audacious that donald trump in the wrapping up of his campaign went to minnesota. minnesota, a lot of people saying it s audacious thing for him to be in a blue state on the eve of this election, whether or not he has a chance in minnesota, in minneapolis, that was the message that he brought to try to get white people to be afraid of non-white people in their midst. we ll be covering his final
this, to michigan because michigan is in play. and i may get there a little bit late but there are thousands and thousands of people, the polls just came out, we re leading in michigan. we re leading in new hampshire, we re leading in ohio, we re leading in iowa. we re leading in north carolina. i think we re doing really, really well in pennsylvania. and i do believe we are leading in florida. so it s going to be amazing. donald trump speaking tonight in new hampshire in what is the second to last event of the election eve. tonight, you re looking at live pictures of a fired up president obama along with former president clinton, john bon v f