Clinton adds pop of celebrity in
homestretch of campaign
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[October 31, 2016]
By Roberta Rampton
MIAMI (Reuters) - Democratic presidential
candidate Hillary Clinton, whose buoyant position in opinion polls has
been threatened by a surprising new twist in the saga over her emails,
on Saturday harnessed some celebrity star power she hopes will help win
the battleground state of Florida on Nov. 8.
Musician and actor Jennifer Lopez headlined a free concert in Miami as
part of a star-studded effort to get out the vote and energize
volunteers.
"We're at a crossroads and we have to take the right road to the
future," Lopez shouted to screaming fans in rain gear who danced through
rain and a shower of red, white and blue confetti.
The concert provided some visual counter-programming to the latest email
snafu to roil Clinton's race to win the White House.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation said on Friday it is investigating
more emails as part of a probe into Clinton's use of a private email
system - a late-breaking surprise that will likely continue to get
extensive media play leading up Election Day.
Clinton's campaign has said she is taking the news in stride, and on
Saturday she lashed out at FBI Director James Comey over the review.
The JLo event was the first of three high-profile concerts in states
Clinton wants to keep from Republican rival Donald Trump, and it gave
the former secretary of state a chance to connect with the key
demographic of millennials she has sometimes struggled to reach.
"If we turn out, we win," Clinton told the crowd.
Celebrity-driven events like the concert "can serve as a bit of a
distraction" from the controversy, said Eric Kasper, a political
scientist at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire.
"It is a way to kind of take the edge off things because it tends to be
more positive," Kasper said.
Next week, Clinton will take the stage with Jay Z in Cleveland, and then
with Katy Perry in Philadelphia on Nov. 5.
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Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton joins performers
Jennifer Lopez and Marc Anthony at a campaign concert in Miami,
Florida, U.S. October 29, 2016. REUTERS/Brian Snyder
A Harvard University poll this week showed that among likely voters aged
18 to 29, Clinton is leading Trump, a celebrity in his own right who
starred in the reality television show "The Apprentice."
But turnout is a concern. The exceptionally negative tone of this
year's race for the White House has turned off young Americans,
Reuters/Ipsos polling shows.
Presidential candidates have long sought to create buzz with help
from celebrity pals, said Tevi Troy, who chronicled the strategy in
his book "What Jefferson Read, Ike Watched, and Obama Tweeted: 200
Years of Pop Culture in the White House."
"Campaigns do it to reach out to people who are not necessarily
interested in politics but are interested in pop culture," said
Troy, a presidential historian who worked in the George W. Bush
White House.
The events are like a larger version of a campaign yard sign, a way
to show a "groundswell" of support behind a candidate - and a way to
appeal to fans of the musicians, Kasper said.
"It can create a kind of psychological connection that we otherwise
might not have when a politician endorses a presidential candidate,
for instance," Kasper said.
(Reporting by Roberta Rampton; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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