Schuette & Whitmer Crisscross Michigan To Make Final PeaIn Final Campaign Stops
LANSING, Mich. (AP) — Republican Bill Schuette and Democrat Gretchen Whitmer crisscrossed Michigan on Monday, making their closing appeals and firing up their get-out-the-vote organizers on the eve of the election for governor.
We stopped in Flint for lunch this afternoon and met with our wonderful Genesee County supporters! pic.twitter.com/6mVJYhueE9
— Bill Schuette (@SchuetteOnDuty) November 5, 2018
Schuette, the state attorney general who has trailed in polls, pointed to Donald Trump's surprise 2016 victory in Michigan, when some final-week surveys showed Hillary Clinton slightly ahead while others had it as a close race.
Good morning, Michigan! We're starting the day in my hometown of Midland today! Less than 24 hours until the polls open, find out where to vote here: https://t.co/hTDIdLsRtK pic.twitter.com/WHdwNFVrqy
— Bill Schuette (@SchuetteOnDuty) November 5, 2018
"A funny thing happened on the way to the White House. A funny thing is going to happen on the way to the governor's house," Schuette said at the state GOP headquarters in Lansing, where volunteers were calling potential voters. "We're going to win this because (of) the desire to make sure we build on the success of the last eight years and we can't go back."
Thank you Fox Run for having me come in today to talk to people about the issues. pic.twitter.com/5yc1shGU37
— Governor Gretchen Whitmer (@GovWhitmer) November 5, 2018
Unlike in 2016, Whitmer has led or has been slightly ahead in every poll in the race to succeed term-limited Republican Gov. Rick Snyder. The former legislative leader said she was taking nothing for granted, however.
Kent County #ONEMI office is put in force! Deep in DeVos territory, @gretchenwhitmer & @MichiganDems are not letting up on the momentum! #letsgetthisdone #GOTDV pic.twitter.com/higcOo67i6
— Paula #endgunviolence Herbart (@PaulaMEAPres) November 5, 2018
"We have resisted, we have protested, we have marched, we have rallied," she told supporters at a Grand Rapids brewery, citing the Women's March and protests against Republican health care and immigration policies. "All of this ... none of it matters if we don't keep our foot on the gas these last 36 hours."
Whitmer — whom Schuette has criticized for voting to raise taxes in the past — listed a series of issues that are "on the ballot": clean drinking water, LGBT civil rights, the Medicaid expansion she helped pass, GOP education policies influenced by the conservative DeVos family and women's reproductive rights. Schuette pointed to the economic recovery while urging against going "backward" with Whitmer.
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