It's going to the wire: Clinton will campaign at MIDNIGHT as fierce election battle with Trump goes beyond the eleventh hour

  • Final election rally in Raleigh, North Carolina, by the Democrat will start at midnight meaning she will campaign in the early hours of Tuesday
  • Trump has already gone past midnight, with a rally in Leesburg, VA,  that started early on Monday morning 
  • Clinton and Trump's efforts are concentrating on the states they believe are crucial with Clinton wanting to get late surge in North Carolina
  • Trump will be in North Carolina, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, before ending with a late event in Michigan
  • Polls show Clinton has wafer-thin lead after almost two-years of campaigning
  • She is hoping for boost from being cleared again by FBI's Director James Comey on emails 

White House rivals Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump were due to duel Monday for a handful of must-win states in an end-game election frenzy capping a historically divisive campaign.

With less than 48 hours until voting day, it was unclear whether the Democrat could convert into electoral gain the announcement Sunday that the FBI had cleared her again of wrongdoing over her email use.

Clinton's popularity had dipped after FBI Director James Comey dropped a campaign bombshell eight days earlier with a reopened inquiry into whether she exposed US secrets by using a private email server while serving as secretary of state.

Opinion polls had tightened as Trump began to recover ground lost while battling accusations of sexual assault, and the race looked headed for a photo finish.

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Race to the finish: Both candidates are on the verge of knowing whether their campaigns have succeeded, with Trump going past midnight and into Monday morning in Leesburg, VA

Is it her time: Clinton will copy the post-midnight approach in Raleigh, North Carolina, where she thinks she can get the state behind her 

INSIDE THE FINAL DAY

The candidates and their prominent supporters are criss-crossing states. Here is where they will be:

DONALD TRUMP

11am: Sarasota Fairgrounds, Sarasota, Florida

3pm: J.S. Dorton Arena, Raleigh, North Carolina

5.30pm: Lackawanna College Student Union, Scranton, Pennsylvania

8pm: Manchester, New Hampshire, with Mike Pence

11pm: Devos Place, Grand Rapids, Michigan, with Mike Pence Pence

MIKE PENCE 

9:30 am: Duluth, Minnesota

Traverse City, Michigan

Erie, Pennsylvania

HILLARY CLINTON 

Noon: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

4 pm: Grand Valley State University Fieldhouse, Grand Rapids, Michigan

7.30 pm: Rally with President Obama, Michelle Obama, Bill and Chlesea Clinton, Jon Bon Jovi and Bruce Springsteen. Independence Hall, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Midnight: Reynolds Coliseum, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina

TIM KAINE

Charlotte, North Carolina

Wilmington, North Carolina

Fairfax, Virginia

Richmond Airport, Richmond, Virginia

PRESIDENT OBAMA

Ray L. Fisher Stadium, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

Whittemore Center Arena, Durham, New Hampshire

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, with Clinton

JOE BIDEN 

Tallahassee, Florida

St. Petersburg, Florida

Fairfax, Virginia

Wilmington, Delaware

BILL CLINTON 

Greensboro, North Carolina

Philadelphia rally with his wife 

The billionaire Republican contender, who has whipped up a populist grassroots movement among largely white male voters, landed in Sarasota, Florida early Monday and was met by an enthusiastic crowd.

After a stop there, the 70-year-old is due to fly to rallies in North Carolina, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, before ending with a late event in Michigan.

In Virginia Sunday, he stoked supporters at a post-midnight rally with stock attacks on his rival, branding her the 'most corrupt candidate ever to seek the office of the presidency.'

Clinton, 69, had events planned through midnight Monday, with stops in Pennsylvania, Michigan, and North Carolina. The rallies will include appearances by a star-studded roster of supporters headlined by President Barack Obama and rock star Bruce Springsteen.

Clinton's Sunday rallies had a note of optimism mixed with warnings of the threat posed by Trump.

'I really want each and every one of us to think for a moment about how we would feel on November 9, if we were not successful,' she said in Manchester, New Hampshire

'When your kids and grandkids ask you what you did in 2016, when everything was on the line, I hope you'll be able to say you voted for a better, stronger, fairer America.'

The world has looked on aghast as Trump's sensationalist reality television style became a driving force propelling him toward the most powerful political post in the world.

Global financial markets were rocked when the renewed FBI probe threatened to sink Clinton's chances, and were boosted by news of the FBI's closure of the affair. Asian and European exchanges jumped Monday morning, hours after the announcement.

But commentators said renewal of the email scandal, which dominated one of the last news cycles ahead of the election, had already damaged the Democratic former first lady's chance of succeeding Obama.

Clinton's lead dropped from 5.7 to 2.9 percentage points in the week since the scandal returned, according to influential data website FiveThirtyEight.com.

The latest polls on Monday morning gave her a lead of at best four points, and mostly less than that - a wafer-thin advantage and in most cases, well within the three-point margin of error. 

Trump is predicting a ballot upset on par with Britain's shock vote to quit the European Union, or what on Sunday he called: 'Brexit plus, plus, plus.' 

Lock her up: The rallying cry among Trump supporters reflects his campaign's hope that public frustration at the wave of sleaze inquiries and revelations will boost the Republicans

Family support: Both candidates' spouses hit the trail at the weekend, with Melania Trump introducing her husband on Saturday in Wilimington, NC

Crucial state: Bill Clinton was dispatched to Flint, Michigan, a state which both sides see as must-win. Clinton went to Grace Emmanuel Baptist Church in an effort to encourage African-Americans votes

'The rank and file special agents of the FBI won't let her get away with her terrible crimes,' Trump told a rally in Michigan, a state Obama won comfortably in 2012.

For Trump and his supporters, Clinton symbolizes the corruption of the Washington elite.

'Right now she's being protected by a rigged system. It's a totally rigged system. I've been saying it for a long time,' he declared, as his supporters chanted 'Lock her up!'

Trump has repeatedly condemned Clinton's 'criminal scheme' and argued that she's unfit to be president.

He has previously threatened to reject the result of Tuesday's vote if he loses, alleging that the race has been 'rigged' by the media and the establishment elite.

Opinion polls tightened over the last week as Trump began to recover ground he lost after several women accused him of sexual assault, and the race looked headed for a photo finish.

Clinton made no direct reference to the FBI reprieve during her Sunday campaign stops.

US presidential election ©Paz PIZARRO (AFP)

Instead, she hammered her opponent over his sometimes ugly rhetoric and, implicitly, the alleged covert Russian interference that has poisoned the race.

'There are powerful forces inside and outside of America that do threaten to pull us apart,' she said.

'We've arrived at a moment of reckoning in this election. Our core values as Americans are being tested.'

If Clinton wins, she will seek to build on Obama's cautious but progressive legacy, including his controversial health insurance reforms.

Trump has vowed to tear up the reform along with free trade agreements, to rebuild a 'depleted' US military, and review US alliances.

The latest polls give Clinton a narrow national lead of between three and five percentage points, but rolling averages point to a closer race, with Trump up in some swing states.

Silver has Clinton as a two-to-one favorite against Trump, but warned Sunday that her lead appears 'less solid' than Obama's did before his re-election victory in 2012.

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