Hillary Clinton's campaign is going all in on what it believes is a winning political strategy against Donald Trump: Paint him as a dangerous menace to the country.
After slamming Trump
for days as a disaster on national security in the aftermath of last
weekend's Orlando massacre, Clinton unleashed a similar attack on her
Republican rival — this time, on the economy.
The
former secretary of state delivered her first general election economic
speech in Columbus, Ohio, in the morning, in remarks that once again
attempted to dismantle Trump's policy prescriptions and cast the
businessman as a danger to the U.S. economy.
"You
might think that because he has spent his life as a businessman, he'd
be better prepared to handle the economy. Well, it turns out, he's
dangerous there, too," Clinton told supporters here. "Just like he
shouldn't have his finger on the button, he shouldn't have his hands on
our economy."
In lengthy remarks,
Clinton challenged Trump's policy proposals point by point, from his
suggestion to pay off the national debt by printing money to his stance
on Wall Street reform to his tax plan. She warned: "Our nation's economy
isn't a game."
"Every day we see how reckless and
careless Trump is. He's proud of it," she said. "Well, that's his
choice, except when he's asking to be president. Then it's our choice."
The
speech was filled with memorable zingers. Slamming Trump for lacking a
substantive strategy on job-creation, Clinton said: "But maybe we
shouldn't expect better from someone whose famous words are: 'You're
fired.'"
And as Clinton went after
Trump's business record, she mused: "He's written a lot of books about
business. They all seem to end at Chapter 11."
Clinton's pivot to the economy comes at a moment of peril for the Trump campaign.
The first-time political candidate is under siege for a series of
missteps since clinching his party's nomination, including his response
to the Orlando terrorist attack, repeated criticism of a federal judge's
Mexican heritage, and renewed calls to ban Muslims from entering the
country. Acknowledging the gravity of his political troubles, Trump on Monday fired his top aide and campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski.
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