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Donald Trump's greatest hits from the last debate have inspired new bathroom designations at a community center in Pensacola, Florida, where President Bill Clinton held a rally Saturday.
The typical "MEN" and "WOMEN" signs were replaced with placards that read "BAD HOMBRES" and "NASTY WOMEN."
Trump called rival Hillary Clinton a "nasty woman" during the third and final presidential debate this week while she discussed entitlements. Earlier in the night, as he answered moderator Chris Wallace's question about immigration, he said, "We have some bad hombres here, and we're going to get them out."
The internet and social media have since adopted the phrases, creating a number of memes and merchandise that display the two slogans.
For singer Miley Cyrus, it will only be a "Party in the USA" if her favorite candidate wins the election — and she's doing everything possible to make that happen.
"The Voice" coach went to George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, Saturday afternoon to knock on dorm room doors and urge students to vote for Hillary Clinton.
Dressed in a flashy red, white and blue ensemble, Cyrus asked students who they planned to vote for, chatted with them about the consequences of not voting and even played video games with some.
"I'm going from door-to-door right now in support of Hillary and Tim. Are you going to vote? Have you registered to vote? Are you voting here or from out of town? Voting for Clinton and Kaine?" Cyrus asked one student after surprising her at her door.
She bounded from room to room, and also gave Clinton pins as souvenirs to students who said they were supporting her in November.
Hillary Clinton has vowed to be the "president for everybody," whether they vote for her or not.
"I don't want to leave anybody behind. I'm going to be the president for the people who vote against me and for me. I take that responsibility hard because I feel there's a place for everyone in America," Clinton told DJ Anjali "Queen B" on Tampa radio station 97.7 FM on Friday.
She said it would require a "greater effort" to accomplish that as the first female president, but feels she is up for the challenge.
Clinton added that she felt responsibility to bring people together amid the adversarial race with Donald Trump, and said she regretted how much the election had divided America.
"I really regret how divisive this campaign has been. Many of the things that have been said by my opponent are hurtful and have set people against each other. I've got the responsibility of not only being commander-in-chief, but I've got to figure out how we'd heal this divide," Clinton said.
The former secretary of state lamented the fact that Americans don't seem to see the "potential in front of us," and instead engage in hateful rhetoric and bullying.
Even though Bernie Sanders is no longer in the presidential race, many supporters haven't given up on him — or on other options besides Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, data from Google Trends shows.
The data shows that searches for the term "write in," as in write-in candidate, have been growing since August, hitting a peak on October 13 — which happens to be the day after four women accused Republican candidate Donald Trump of touching them inappropriately.
During that week, searches for "write in" rose by 2,800 percent, the highest its been since 2004. Searches for "is Bernie Sanders a write in candidate" rose 2,750 percent and searches for "write in Mike Pence" grew 2,400 percent the same week. Other candidates searched include Mitt Romney and Evan McMullin.
The highest interest is in New Jersey, Vermont, Rhode Island and New Hampshire. All of these states allow write-in candidates.
Write-in votes accounted for 0.11 percent of the vote in 2012. While they have the potential to make some impact on the race, they are rarely counted by states.
Sanders has strongly urged his supporters to back Hillary Clinton, but many have been reluctant to do so.
Donald Trump Jr. is defending his father's recently unearthed lewd comments about women, calling it a "fact of life" that men talk like that.
The Republican nominee's son spoke Friday to KIRO radio's Dori Monson about the comments, which were caught on a hot microphone on a 2005 "Access Hollywood" videotape. ("Access Hollywood" is owned and distributed by NBCUniversal, the parent company of NBC News and MSNBC.)
The tape, in which Trump is heard boasting about attempting to seduce a married woman, sparked backlash within the GOP and beyond.
"I think we all know guys who have had conversations with other guys that go a little bit in that direction. That's a fact of life," Trump Jr. said.
He asked voters to realize that his father hadn't "spent his whole life" being a politician.
"He hasn't spent his whole life polishing every statement he's ever made and every conversation he's ever had. He doesn't run a focus group so he can tell you what he's thinking. He speaks from the heart," Trump Jr. said, jabbing Clinton for differences in her public and private statements that he said came to light in the leaked emails from her chief of staff, John Podesta.
Of the string of sexual misconduct allegations that have been waged against him, Trump Jr. said, "Obviously, he's not happy" about them.
Trump Jr. said felt his father could still relate to "ordinary Americans" better on "many cases" than Hillary Clinton.
Offices of Hillary Clinton's campaign headquarters in New York were evacuated on Friday evening after receiving a letter with a "white powdered substance," according to officials.
The entire 11th floor was cleared around 5:30 p.m. ET after the unknown substance arrived in a business size envelope to Clinton's Brooklyn headquarters, the NYPD's Office of the Deputy Commissioner, Public Information (DCPI) told NBC News.
"Preliminary testing by federal and local officials has found the substance to be non-hazardous. The four individuals involved have reported no health issues and, following a full examination by medical personnel, were each released to go home," said Clinton spokesperson Glen Caplin. "Our office remained open throughout this period and will remain open without interruption tomorrow morning."
EXETER, New Hampshire — Mike Pence rolled out of New Hampshire on Friday night with a five-stop day in the books. It was the Indiana governor's busiest day on the campaign trail — one that, notably, hasn't been overly strenuous when it comes to speech giving and retail politicking.
He wrapped up his day in the Granite State with a campaign rally that comfortably fit the old Exeter Town Hall, a famed site where Abraham Lincoln once addressed the town.
"That man is ready. This team is ready. This movement is ready," Pence roared to close his speech. "If you go make sure New Hampshire is ready, we will make Donald Trump the 45th President of the United States of America, and we will make America great again."
The full-throated backing of his running mate included the insistence that Trump "beat Hillary Clinton hands down" at the debate in Las Vegas Wednesday, and noted that the campaign has "unrelenting momentum," as Pence told the crowd about his stops in Albuquerque and Reno on Thursday.
"Yeah, it's a big country," Pence chuckled. He told them that he can "sense this enthusiasm" and suggested that Trump is "still standing stronger than ever before."
Former KKK leader David Duke, 66, has earned enough support in the Louisiana Senate race to take the debate stage, according to The Acadiana Advocate. The debate will be held Nov. 2 at Dillard University, a historically black college.
Duke announced in late July that he was running for the open Senate seat. He endorsed Donald Trump, who Duke said had bolstered the white nationalist movement and inspired him to run. The Republican presidential candidate has disavowed Duke multiple times.
Duke said it was "amazing" that he met the 5 percent minimum requirement to attend the debate, but worried about visiting a black university.
"Dillard is pretty supportive of Black Lives Matter, and I've been pretty critical of them," he said, according to the Advocate.
That's so Miley.
The Voice judge, singer, songwriter and philanthropist Miley Cyrus will be joining Hillary Clinton's VP Pick, Tim Kaine, to campaign for Clinton at George Mason University, V.A. on Saturday, October 22.
"Comin to VA for HC!!!" Cyrus said in a Tweet that also included the hashtag #imwithher and a photo of Clinton's face in the middle of an American dollar.
As a passionate advocate for LGBTQ rights and a pansexual, Cyrus intends to literally knock on doors in the college to speak to students about the "high-stake gamble" of this election particularly for millennial voters.
Cyrus plans to urge voters to visit iwillvote.com and ensure they have adequate information on how to vote for on Election Day.
Vice President Joe Biden didn't hold back during a rally for Hillary Clinton today, taking a jab at Donald Trump for theleaked Access Hollywood tape.
Biden said it was "a disgusting assertion for Trump to make" in the lewd tape that he could "do things" to women that other people couldn't just because he is "a billionaire." The vice president has called it "a textbook version of sexual assault" and critiqued Trump's abuse of power publicly.
"The press always asks me, don't I wish I were debating him? No, I wish we were in high school, and I could take him behind the gym. That's what I wish," Biden said at Wilkes University in P.A.
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