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US election 2020: Donald Trump holds rallies in Florida following final debate

Donald Trump says the final presidential debate showed Joe Biden was “not capable” of leading the US, as he revealed what “surprised” him during the showdown.

Trump: 'We'll have 100 million vaccine doses before the end of this year'

The final US presidential debate was an “exciting night” where Democratic nominee Joe Biden proved he was “not capable” of leading the country, Donald Trump says.

Mr Trump addressed a rally at The Villages in Florida this morning, the first of two he has scheduled in the state today.

The US President told crowds voters had a choice between a “Trump super recovery” or a “Biden depression” as the country struggles to get COVID-19 case numbers under control.

“Joe Biden proved last night that he is not capable of being president of the United States,” Mr Trump said.

Donald Trump labelled the final US presidental debate an “exciting night”. Picture: AFP
Donald Trump labelled the final US presidental debate an “exciting night”. Picture: AFP
Mr Trump said Joe Biden is “not capable” of leading the US. Picture: AFP
Mr Trump said Joe Biden is “not capable” of leading the US. Picture: AFP

He added: “It’s a choice between optimism and a patriotic vision for American success... or Joe Biden’s gloomy vision.”

Mr Trump said the US was “rounding the corner” in its fight against the virus, as more than 70,000 cases were recorded on Thursday — the first time the country has reached such a high in three months.

Mr Trump claimed that Mr Biden was “corrupt”, and alleged the former vice president had “used his office for personal profit”.

“How did he get so rich when he’s been in public office for 47 years?,” Mr Trump said.

Crowds at The Villages Polo Club in Flordia for Mr Trump’s rally. Picture: AFP
Crowds at The Villages Polo Club in Flordia for Mr Trump’s rally. Picture: AFP
Stuart Sawyer dressed as a Super Trump at The Villages Polo Club in Flordia. Picture: AFP
Stuart Sawyer dressed as a Super Trump at The Villages Polo Club in Flordia. Picture: AFP

He also took aim at Mr Biden’s running mate, Kamala Harris, saying she would never rise to the top job.

“We’re not going to have a socialist president... we’re not going to have a female socialist president. We’re not going to put up with it,” he said.

Mr Trump also said he was “surprised” the moderator of the final presidential debate, Kristen Welker, treated him “very fairly”

“She’s been a little bit rough on me over the years. Her network (NBC) is crazy... but she did a very good job,” he said.

Mr Trump finished his day with a rally in Pensacola, Florida, where he told the cheering crowd that “11 days from now, we’re going to win my home state of Florida.”

While he is a lifelong New Yorker, Mr Trump changed his residency to Florida during his White House tenure and on Saturday he was to cast his own ballot in West Palm Beach.

The rest of the weekend will see the US President maintaining the frenetic pace with rallies in North Carolina and Ohio on Saturday, then New Hampshire on Sunday, before a spate of more rallies next week.

Trump said that by November 3 he’ll be doing “five or six a day.”

TRUMP ASKS: COULD ‘SLEEPY JOE’ HAVE DONE THIS PEACE DEAL?

Donald Trump has declared at least five more countries want to sign peace deals in the Middle East.

He has asked whether “sleepy Joe Biden” could have brokered the Middle East peace deal that he just did.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was on speaker phone with Trump in the Oval Office to discuss normalising relations between Israel and Sudan.

Mr Trump asked Mr Netanyahu: “Do you think Sleepy Joe could have made this deal, Bibi?”

“Sleepy Joe... you think he would have made this deal somehow? I don’t think so,” the president said.

Netanyahu appeared to remain silent on the line before answering a few seconds later.

“Well, Mr President, one thing I could tell you is we appreciate the help for peace from anyone in America and we appreciate what you’ve done.”

ANALYSIS: NO KNOCKOUT BLOW IN FINAL US PRESIDENTIAL DEBATE

The crowd gathered on a Nashville rooftop bar was decidedly pro-Trump — some in MAGA hats, cheering and whooping as Donald Trump landed blows on his rival.

Not surprisingly, they put the President ahead of Democrat challenger Joe Biden after the second and final debate, just 10 days before election day on Tuesday week.

But what Mr Trump didn’t achieve was the knockout blow he needed, and that makes his fight to retain the White House even tougher.

Trailing in almost every poll and roundly criticised for his poor handling of the pandemic, Mr Trump was seeking a game-changing moment that never came.

He went into the debate with the growing scandal over Mr Biden’s son’s business dealings as his main weapon, after Hunter Biden’s former business partner said the Democratic candidate had lev­eraged his position to make millions of dollars.

Donald Trump went into the debate with the growing scandal over Joe Biden’s son’s business dealings. Picture: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images/AFP
Donald Trump went into the debate with the growing scandal over Joe Biden’s son’s business dealings. Picture: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images/AFP
Joe Biden denied any wrongdoing. Picture: AFP
Joe Biden denied any wrongdoing. Picture: AFP

Tony Bobulinski, whose name was on the email chain in an email published by the New York Post detailing business dealings between members of the Biden family and a Chinese company, told Fox News that Mr Biden was the “big guy” wanting a 10 per cent cut, who was referred to in the messages.

Mr Biden was further implicated in his son’s business dealings in a text message shared by Mr Bobulinski, which warned him “don’t mention Joe being involved”.

Karen Young, 55, yells pro-Biden slogans outside Belmont University where the final US Presidential Debate was held. Picture: Angus Mordant for News Corp Australia
Karen Young, 55, yells pro-Biden slogans outside Belmont University where the final US Presidential Debate was held. Picture: Angus Mordant for News Corp Australia

It was one of several messages obtained by Fox News that apparently show Mr Bobulinski being instructed by another man involved in the scheme not to refer in written correspondence to the former vice-president in a 2017 business deal with China.

“Don’t mention Joe being involved, it’s only when u (sic) are face-to-face, I know u (sic) know that but they are paranoid,” read the message, shared on Twitter by Fox News chief congressional correspondent Mike Emanuel.

Mr Trump’s daughters, from left, Ivanka and Tiffany with son Eric Trump's wife Lara arriving for the debate. Picture: AFP
Mr Trump’s daughters, from left, Ivanka and Tiffany with son Eric Trump's wife Lara arriving for the debate. Picture: AFP
US First Lady Melania Trump wears a face mask as she attends the final presidential debate. Picture: AFP
US First Lady Melania Trump wears a face mask as she attends the final presidential debate. Picture: AFP

Mr Biden said this week the reports had no merit and were part of a “smear campaign”, but the Bidens have not denied Hunter owned the laptop which contained the emails and was handed to authorities and eventually the New York Post.

But even as Mr Trump threw the claims repeatedly at Mr Biden, he didn’t manage to draw blood.

“If this stuff is true about Russia, Ukraine, China, other countries, Iraq, then he is a corrupt politician,” Mr Trump said.

A Mr T impersonator walks past Trump supporters outside the debate venue. Picture: Angus Mordant for News Corp Australia
A Mr T impersonator walks past Trump supporters outside the debate venue. Picture: Angus Mordant for News Corp Australia

“So don’t give me this stuff about how you’re the guy who is the innocent baby, Joe, they are calling you a corrupt politician. I think you owe an explanation to the American people. I think you have to clean it up and talk to the American people.”

In finally addressing the corruption allegations, Mr Biden said: “I have not taken a single penny from any country whatsoever.”

And although Mr Trump kept trying to return to the ­allegations, Mr Biden held firm and held his temper.

Joe Biden wife Jill wears a face mask during the debate. Picture: AFP
Joe Biden wife Jill wears a face mask during the debate. Picture: AFP

While Mr Biden had a couple of “senior moments”, changing track mid-answer, he managed to hold up his end for 90 minutes.

And Mr Trump shed the belligerent, bullying attitude he showed three weeks ago when the pair first duked it out in Cleveland

This meant Americans had their most thorough airing of policy as the candidates discussed the coronavirus, social security, immigration, race, national security and climate change policy.

Restaurant consultants and Trump supporters Rachel and Michael Klein were among a couple of dozen who gathered in Nashville ahead of the debate for some hot chicken and burgers.

A debate watch party at Nashville Underground in Nashville, Tennessee, USA. Picture: Angus Mordant for News Corp Australia
A debate watch party at Nashville Underground in Nashville, Tennessee, USA. Picture: Angus Mordant for News Corp Australia

Ms Klein, 45, said she believed Mr Trump performed well, but admitted that she was disappointed in his final response.

“I think Trump made some really good points,” she said.

“I do think that Trump made a misstep on this last question because he should have continued to say what he would say on inauguration day. He went into who Biden is, and we won’t care who Biden is on inauguration day,” she said.

“I wanted to hear him say I am your American president and let’s come together.”

Michael Klein, 42, and his wife Rachel Klein, 45, at a Presidential Debate watch party at Nashville Underground in Nashville, Tennessee, USA. Picture: Angus Mordant for News Corp Australia
Michael Klein, 42, and his wife Rachel Klein, 45, at a Presidential Debate watch party at Nashville Underground in Nashville, Tennessee, USA. Picture: Angus Mordant for News Corp Australia

Snap polls at the end of the debate were mixed. A Fox8 poll concluded that 59 per cent believed Mr Trump won, and influential Fox commentator Sean Hannity said the moderator interrupted Mr Trump 30 times, compared to just twice for Mr Biden.

A small group of undecided North Carolina voters polled by CNN said after the debate that they were much happier with the substance this time than in the first face-off.

In the group of undecideds, nine people said they thought Mr Biden won. None thought Mr Trump had won.

CNN’s “instant poll” after the debate said Mr Biden won the debate by 53 per cent to 39 per cent, compared to a winning margin of 60 per cent to 28 per cent in the first debate.

- with AFP

Originally published as US election 2020: Donald Trump holds rallies in Florida following final debate

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Original URL: https://www.thechronicle.com.au/news/world/us-election-2020-no-knockout-blow-in-final-debate/news-story/708a021675f0ac08a23b9fa287b0174d