Fending off Trump, Clinton tries to secure Midwest blue wall
WASHINGTON — Hillary Clinton is rushing to secure Michigan and bolster the Democrats’ vaunted blue wall of upper Midwestern states that have backed the party’s presidential nominee for two decades, sending in reinforcements as Donald Trump aims to blow up the former secretary of state’s path to 270 electoral votes.
Clinton on Friday planned to rally Democrats in Detroit, where a large turnout of black voters have long been crucial to success, following up on a last-minute meeting by former President Bill Clinton with black ministers on Wednesday night.
Clinton’s campaign has noted that both Michigan and Pennsylvania do not have in-person early voting, requiring them to intensify turnout efforts in the days leading up to Tuesday’s election. But the late focus on Michigan, which has not received extensive attention from Clinton during the campaign, underscored Democratic concerns that Trump was gaining in a state that hasn’t backed a Republican presidential candidate since 1988.
Trailing in several battleground states, Trump’s fortunes have improved since FBI Director James Comey’s stunning announcement that the bureau was looking into emails that may be related to the investigation into Clinton’s use of a private server.

