Alt-Trump Debates Hillary

It appeared to us that Donald Trump won the third debate with Hillary Clinton Wednesday night, as it was his best performance of the three and hit her with several damaging shots. That said, some of the post-debate polls indicated the opposite.

But even while Trump might have won, what we saw was a huge number of missed opportunities in which a Trump who was better prepared and more skilled than the one on the stage could have not only won the debate but turned it into a demolition – the kind of clear victory that changes the course of an election.

It’s possible, we suppose, that the real Trump did that on Wednesday. We’re pretty sure that Alt-Trump would have. Here’s how it would have gone…

WALLACE: Good evening from the Thomas and Mack Center at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. I’m Chris Wallace of Fox News, and I welcome you to the third and final of the 2016 presidential debates between Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Donald J. Trump.

WALLACE: This debate is sponsored by the Commission on Presidential Debates. The commission has designed the format: Six roughly 15-minute segments with two-minute answers to the first question, then open discussion for the rest of each segment. Both campaigns have agreed to those rules.

For the record, I decided the topics and the questions in each topic. None of those questions has been shared with the commission or the two candidates. The audience here in the hall has promised to remain silent. No cheers, boos, or other interruptions so we and you can focus on what the candidates have to say.

WALLACE: No noise, except right now, as we welcome the Democratic nominee for president, Secretary Clinton, and the Republican nominee for president, Mr. Trump.

(APPLAUSE)

Secretary Clinton, Mr. Trump, welcome. Let’s get right to it. The first topic is the Supreme Court.

You both talked briefly about the court in the last debate, but I want to drill down on this, because the next president will almost certainly have at least one appointment and likely or possibly two or three appointments.

WALLACE: Which means that you will, in effect, determine the balance of the court for what could be the next quarter century.

First of all, where do you want to see the court take the country? And secondly, what’s your view on how the Constitution should be interpreted? Do the founders’ words mean what they say or is it a living document to be applied flexibly according to changing circumstances? In this segment, Secretary Clinton, you go first. You have two minutes.

CLINTON: Thank you very much, Chris. And thanks to UNLV for hosting us.

You know, I think when we talk about the Supreme Court, it really raises the central issue in this election, namely, what kind of country are we going to be? What kind of opportunities will we provide for our citizens? What kind of rights will Americans have?

And I feel strongly that the Supreme Court needs to stand on the side of the American people, not on the side of the powerful corporations and the wealthy. For me, that means that we need a Supreme Court that will stand up on behalf of women’s rights, on behalf of the rights of the LGBT community, that will stand up and say no to Citizens United, a decision that has undermined the election system in our country because of the way it permits dark, unaccountable money to come into our electoral system.

I have major disagreements with my opponent about these issues and others that will be before the Supreme Court. But I feel that at this point in our country’s history, it is important that we not reverse marriage equality, that we not reverse Roe v. Wade, that we stand up against Citizens United, we stand up for the rights of people in the workplace, that we stand up and basically say: The Supreme Court should represent all of us.

That’s how I see the court, and the kind of people that I would be looking to nominate to the court would be in the great tradition of standing up to the powerful, standing up on behalf of our rights as Americans.

And I look forward to having that opportunity. I would hope that the Senate would do its job and confirm the nominee that President Obama has sent to them. That’s the way the Constitution fundamentally should operate. The president nominates, and then the Senate advises and consents, or not, but they go forward with the process.

WALLACE: Secretary Clinton, thank you.

WALLACE: Mr. Trump, same question. Where do you want to see the court take the country? And how do you believe the Constitution should be interpreted?

TRUMP: Well, first of all, it’s great to be with you, and thank you, everybody.

I notice that Secretary Clinton failed to answer your question, and specifically she failed to say anything about her vision for the Constitution and its role in jurisprudence if she’s president. There’s a reason for that, because Hillary doesn’t believe in the Constitution. That much she did tell us just now.

Why do I say that? Because she just said it was imperative that we don’t have justices who reverse Roe v. Wade but that we do have justices who reverse Citizens United. Nobody who takes seriously any real interpretation of the Constitution as a document that means anything would take such a position. Let’s remember that Citizens United was a decision in a case about a filmmaker who made a movie during an election year – a movie. What was the movie about? Well, it was critical of Hillary Clinton! She thinks that we need to upset legal precedent and reverse the Supreme Court because somebody hurt her feelings!

This matters, because as we’ve seen in this election there are supposed news organizations like the New York Times, Washington Post, NBC, CNN and others who have abandoned any pretense of objectivity and just serve as attack dogs for Hillary. If Citizens United were overturned, people – whether they be unions, non-profit organizations or companies – wouldn’t have the right to speak out on politics in election years UNLESS THEY’RE IN THE MEDIA BUSINESS.

And she wants judges who conform to that agenda. Which isn’t a freedom agenda or a constitutional agenda. It’s more like a banana republic dictatorship agenda, which is a theme I expect we’ll come back to again and again in the next hour and a half.

But to answer your question, I’ve put out a list of 20 respected jurists who have an opposing view on the Constitution – they can read it and understand what it says without imposing their political agendas on it. I want to get politics out of the Supreme Court and bring it back to its proper role, and my Supreme Court appointments will do that.

WALLACE: Mr. Trump, thank you.

WALLACE: We now have about 10 minutes for an open discussion. I want to focus on two issues that, in fact, by the justices that you name could end up changing the existing law of the land. First is one that you mentioned, Mr. Trump, and that is guns.

Secretary Clinton, you said last year, let me quote, “The Supreme Court is wrong on the Second Amendment.” And now, in fact, in the 2008 Heller case, the court ruled that there is a constitutional right to bear arms, but a right that is reasonably limited. Those were the words of the Judge Antonin Scalia who wrote the decision. What’s wrong with that?

CLINTON: Well, first of all, I support the Second Amendment. I lived in Arkansas for 18 wonderful years. I represented upstate New York. I understand and respect the tradition of gun ownership. It goes back to the founding of our country.

But I also believe that there can be and must be reasonable regulation. Because I support the Second Amendment doesn’t mean that I want people who shouldn’t have guns to be able to threaten you, kill you or members of your family.

And so when I think about what we need to do, we have 33,000 people a year who die from guns. I think we need comprehensive background checks, need to close the online loophole, close the gun show loophole. There’s other matters that I think are sensible that are the kind of reforms that would make a difference that are not in any way conflicting with the Second Amendment.

You mentioned the Heller decision. And what I was saying that you referenced, Chris, was that I disagreed with the way the court applied the Second Amendment in that case, because what the District of Columbia was trying to do was to protect toddlers from guns and so they wanted people with guns to safely store them. And the court didn’t accept that reasonable regulation, but they’ve accepted many others. So I see no conflict between saving people’s lives and defending the Second Amendment.

WALLACE: Let me bring Mr. Trump in here. The bipartisan Open Debate Coalition got millions of votes on questions to ask here, and this was, in fact, one of the top questions that they got. How will you ensure the Second Amendment is protected? You just heard Secretary Clinton’s answer. Does she persuade you that, while you may disagree on regulation, that, in fact, she supports a Second Amendment right to bear arms?

TRUMP: Toddlers with guns? Is that really the level of discourse we’re going to have in a presidential debate? Which toddlers with guns? What kind of guns? Were there any baby seals with guns we should discuss as well?

Washington, DC is one of the most dangerous cities on the planet. And the guns you’re trying to ban are already illegal there. Amazingly, the criminals shooting them at people don’t care that they’re breaking the law having one. Same story in Chicago where you grew up and where I notice a big number of your political thugs come from.

WALLACE: Well, let me bring in Secretary Clinton.

CLINTON: Well, I was upset because, unfortunately, dozens of toddlers injure themselves, even kill people with guns, because, unfortunately, not everyone who has loaded guns in their homes takes appropriate precautions.

But there’s no doubt that I respect the Second Amendment, that I also believe there’s an individual right to bear arms. That is not in conflict with sensible, commonsense regulation.

And, you know, look, I understand that Donald’s been strongly supported by the NRA. The gun lobby’s on his side. They’re running millions of dollars of ads against me. And I regret that, because what I would like to see is for people to come together and say: Of course we’re going to protect and defend the Second Amendment. But we’re going to do it in a way that tries to save some of these 33,000 lives that we lose every year.

WALLACE: Let me bring Mr. Trump back into this, because, in fact, you oppose any limits on assault weapons, any limits on high- capacity magazines. You support a national right to carry law. Why, sir?

TRUMP: Let’s assure Hillary first that the toddlers are generally going to have trouble shooting themselves with long guns like the assault rifles she’s so scared of. It’s gonna be OK.

Hillary and people like her talk about how committed they are to the Second Amendment, but it’s a lie – and that’s why the NRA is backing me; they’ve seen her in politics for three decades and they’re not stupid. They know she’s lying. And while she’ll blow a lot of words your way about how she’s not gonna affect your right to keep and bear arms, this issue is pretty simple: you have that right and the Constitution is pretty clear – it is NOT TO BE INFRINGED. That means no lists of everybody who owns a gun, no messing with the availability of ammunition, nothing. We focus on the criminals, not the guns. Ask her why the Obama administration has cut federal gun prosecutions by 40 percent. When she can answer that question then we’ll listen to her tell us why it’s necessary to make new laws she’ll do the same lousy job enforcing that her old boss has done with the current laws.

WALLACE: Well, let’s pick up on another issue which divides you and the justices that whoever ends up winning this election appoints could have a dramatic effect there, and that’s the issue of abortion.

TRUMP: Right.

WALLACE: Mr. Trump, you’re pro-life. But I want to ask you specifically: Do you want the court, including the justices that you will name, to overturn Roe v. Wade, which includes — in fact, states — a woman’s right to abortion?

TRUMP: Let’s remember a little bit about civics here. In the event I get to appoint enough judges with a constitutionalist view of the constitution and they look unfavorably on Roe v. Wade, which let’s face it was decided on the basis of politics rather than law regardless of whether you like the outcome or not, then you still need a relevant case to reach the Supreme Court before you’d even have a review of that decision; until then nothing happens at all.

And if the right case came along and Roe v. Wade did get overturned, the immediate effect is that NOTHING WOULD HAPPEN. Other than maybe if what was at issue in the case that overturned Roe v. Wade was a state law impeding abortion in some specific circumstances, because right now there are no state laws imposing a full-on ban, then the 50 states would have the opportunity to decide the issue the way they want and MAYBE some of them would make some changes. Do you think California would change anything? I doubt it. I don’t see New York or Massachusetts outlawing abortion any time soon. But guess what? People in Kansas and Louisiana have a totally different opinion. Why should they have policy on a contentious issue like this that the Constitution says nothing about dictated to them by nine lawyers in black robes they didn’t vote for?

WALLACE: Secretary Clinton?

CLINTON: Well, I strongly support Roe v. Wade, which guarantees a constitutional right to a woman to make the most intimate, most difficult, in many cases, decisions about her health care that one can imagine. And in this case, it’s not only about Roe v. Wade. It is about what’s happening right now in America.

So many states are putting very stringent regulations on women that block them from exercising that choice to the extent that they are defunding Planned Parenthood, which, of course, provides all kinds of cancer screenings and other benefits for women in our country.

Donald has said he’s in favor of defunding Planned Parenthood. He even supported shutting the government down to defund Planned Parenthood. I will defend Planned Parenthood. I will defend Roe v. Wade, and I will defend women’s rights to make their own health care decisions.

WALLACE: Secretary Clinton…

CLINTON: And we have come too far to have that turned back now. And, indeed, he said women should be punished, that there should be some form of punishment for women who obtain abortions. And I could just not be more opposed to that kind of thinking.

WALLACE: I’m going to give you a chance to respond, but I want to ask you, Secretary Clinton, I want to explore how far you believe the right to abortion goes. You have been quoted as saying that the fetus has no constitutional rights. You also voted against a ban on late-term, partial-birth abortions. Why?

CLINTON: Because Roe v. Wade very clearly sets out that there can be regulations on abortion so long as the life and the health of the mother are taken into account. And when I voted as a senator, I did not think that that was the case.

The kinds of cases that fall at the end of pregnancy are often the most heartbreaking, painful decisions for families to make. I have met with women who toward the end of their pregnancy get the worst news one could get, that their health is in jeopardy if they continue to carry to term or that something terrible has happened or just been discovered about the pregnancy. I do not think the United States government should be stepping in and making those most personal of decisions. So you can regulate if you are doing so with the life and the health of the mother taken into account.

WALLACE: Mr. Trump, your reaction? And particularly on this issue of late-term, partial-birth abortions.

TRUMP: She just told you that she’s for partial-birth abortions. She’s for having abortions of a fully-grown fetus on the day he could be delivered. She’s for chopping a baby, that’s viable outside the womb, into pieces. That’s what she just told you. And I’m here to tell you that’s a barbaric, extreme and insane position.

Hillary likes to trash me for the criticisms I make of our government by claiming America is already great because America is good. Well, there is nothing good about partial-birth abortions, and there is nothing good about a policy that allows ripping a baby to pieces when it could be born and somebody could adopt it and give it a great life.

CLINTON: Well, that is not what happens in these cases. And using that kind of scare rhetoric is just terribly unfortunate.

TRUMP: Scare rhetoric? I just described precisely what you’re for. Why lie about your own position?

CLINTON: You should meet with some of the women that I have met with, women I have known over the course of my life. This is one of the worst possible choices that any woman and her family has to make. And I do not believe the government should be making it.

You know, I’ve had the great honor of traveling across the world on behalf of our country. I’ve been to countries where governments either forced women to have abortions, like they used to do in China, or forced women to bear children, like they used to do in Romania. And I can tell you: The government has no business in the decisions that women make with their families in accordance with their faith, with medical advice. And I will stand up for that right.

WALLACE: All right. But just briefly, I want to move on to another segment…

TRUMP: And, honestly, nobody has business doing what I just said, doing that, as late as one or two or three or four days prior to birth. Nobody has that.

WALLACE: All right. Let’s move on to the subject of immigration. And there is almost no issue that separates the two of you more than the issue of immigration. Actually, there are a lot of issues that separate the two of you.

Mr. Trump, you want to build a wall. Secretary Clinton, you have offered no specific plan for how you want to secure our southern border. Mr. Trump, you are calling for major deportations. Secretary Clinton, you say that within your first 100 days as president you’re going to offer a package that includes a pathway to citizenship. The question, really, is, why are you right and your opponent wrong?

Mr. Trump, you go first in this segment. You have two minutes.

TRUMP: Hillary is for wide open borders, and let’s be honest here – she’s not for it because she thinks it’s good policy. She couldn’t care less about that. She’s for it because she thinks the more poor people you import from poor countries, the more Democrat voters you get out of it. It all comes down to that.

Meanwhile you have people waiting in line to immigrate the right way, and her idea is to make them all into suckers for not having just gotten on a plane or walked across the border illegally. That’s a banana republic agenda, with is par for her course.

A nation needs borders, or it’s not a nation. That’s not an extreme position. I’m not even saying the folks here illegally can’t come back. We can come to a solution on that. I think they need to go home first, though, so we can get control of what we have. In the audience tonight, we have four mothers of — I mean, these are unbelievable people that I’ve gotten to know over a period of years whose children have been killed, brutally killed by people that came into the country illegally. You have thousands of mothers and fathers and relatives all over the country. They’re coming in illegally. We have no country if we have no border.

There is a reason why the ICE and Border Patrol agents endorsed me. They know this issue because they work it every day and they know her position is extreme and nonsensical.

By the way, this isn’t just about illegal immigration with the wide open border. It’s also about drugs, you know. I was up in New Hampshire the other day. The biggest complaint they have — the single biggest problem is heroin that pours across our southern border. It’s just pouring and destroying their youth. It’s poisoning the blood of their youth and plenty of other people. We have to have strong borders. We have to keep the drugs out of our country. We are — right now, we’re getting the drugs, they’re getting the cash. We need strong borders.

I’m for building a wall, which at one point Hillary said she was for when she was in the Senate but of course those were just words; no wall ever got built. If you build the thing, you now control the border and you’re not awash in drugs and human trafficking and people we can’t vet, we don’t know who they are or why they’re here or whether they’re a threat to us.

Let’s get control of the border and make it secure. Once it is, I think we can get Republicans and Democrats together and find a solution most of the country regardless of party can agree on.

WALLACE: Mr. Trump, thank you. Same question to you, Secretary Clinton. Basically, why are you right and Mr. Trump is wrong?

CLINTON: Well, as he was talking, I was thinking about a young girl I met here in Las Vegas, Carla, who is very worried that her parents might be deported, because she was born in this country but they were not. They work hard, they do everything they can to give her a good life.

And you’re right. I don’t want to rip families apart. I don’t want to be sending parents away from children. I don’t want to see the deportation force that Donald has talked about in action in our country.

We have 11 million undocumented people. They have 4 million American citizen children, 15 million people. He said as recently as a few weeks ago in Phoenix that every undocumented person would be subject to deportation. Now, here’s what that means. It means you would have to have a massive law enforcement presence, where law enforcement officers would be going school to school, home to home, business to business, rounding up people who are undocumented. And we would then have to put them on trains, on buses to get them out of our country.

I think that is an idea that is not in keeping with who we are as a nation. I think it’s an idea that would rip our country apart.

I have been for border security for years. I voted for border security in the United States Senate. And my comprehensive immigration reform plan of course includes border security. But I want to put our resources where I think they’re most needed: Getting rid of any violent person. Anybody who should be deported, we should deport them.

When it comes to the wall that Donald talks about building, he went to Mexico, he had a meeting with the Mexican president. Didn’t even raise it. He choked and then got into a Twitter war because the Mexican president said we’re not paying for that wall.

So I think we are both a nation of immigrants and we are a nation of laws and that we can act accordingly. And that’s why I’m introducing comprehensive immigration reform within the first 100 days with the path to citizenship.

WALLACE: Thank you, Secretary Clinton. I want to follow up…

TRUMP: Chris, I think it’s…

WALLACE: OK.

TRUMP: I think I should respond to that. First of all, I had a very good meeting with the president of Mexico. Very nice man. We will be doing very much better with Mexico on trade deals. Believe me. The NAFTA deal signed by her husband is one of the worst deals ever made of any kind, signed by anybody. It’s a disaster.

As for paying for the wall, there are a number of different ways that Mexico ends up paying for it. For example, all these remittances people send home to Mexico…

WALLACE: Well, let me — wait, wait, sir, let me…

TRUMP: And maybe we could look at taxing those, or even a tariff of some kind…

WALLACE: Now, wait. I’d like to hear from…

TRUMP: It’s really just a matter of negotiating and legislating in your own interest.

WALLACE: I’d like to hear — I’d like to hear from Secretary Clinton.

CLINTON: I voted for border security, and there are…

TRUMP: And the wall is just a structure that serves a purpose. I do construction. There is no reason why it has to be such a controversial thing. It’s a construction project. It’ll put people to work.

CLINTON: There are some limited places where that was appropriate. There also is necessarily going to be new technology and how best to deploy that.

But it is clear, when you look at what Donald has been proposing, he started his campaign bashing immigrants, calling Mexican immigrants rapists and criminals and drug dealers, that he has a very different view about what we should do to deal with immigrants.

Now, what I am also arguing is that bringing undocumented immigrants out from the shadows, putting them into the formal economy will be good, because then employers can’t exploit them and undercut Americans’ wages.

And Donald knows a lot about this. He used undocumented labor to build the Trump Tower. He underpaid undocumented workers, and when they complained, he basically said what a lot of employers do: “You complain, I’ll get you deported.”

I want to get everybody out of the shadows, get the economy working, and not let employers like Donald exploit undocumented workers, which hurts them, but also hurts American workers.

WALLACE: Mr. Trump?

TRUMP: When it suits his purpose, President Obama will brag about how he’s moved millions of people out. The media doesn’t want to make a big deal about it but he’s deported millions. They’re the ones who either commit crimes, and I’m glad they’re gone, or in some cases he’s deporting them because they come from countries he doesn’t want. You’re British, you’re Irish, you’re Romanian, you get a big middle finger if you overstay your visa.

Point is, under Obama, millions of people have been moved out of this country. They’ve been deported. She doesn’t want to say that, but that’s what’s happened, and that’s what happened big league.

I think the way this is done can be greatly improved on, but this is where I’m not going to be too hard on Obama about it. We either have a country or we don’t. We’re a country of laws. We either have a border or we don’t.

Now, with me you can come back in and you can maybe even become a citizen. But it’s very unfair the way it is. We have millions of people that did it the right way. They’re on line. They’re waiting. We’re maybe going to speed up and re-examine the process, big league, because it’s very inefficient and it could work better to get us people who have talents, who can make our work force better or can start businesses and create jobs. But they’re on line and they’re waiting to become citizens.

Very unfair the way Hillary wants it that somebody runs across the border, becomes a citizen, under her plan, you have open borders. You would have a disaster on trade, and you will have a disaster with your open borders.

WALLACE: I want to…

TRUMP: I might even say Hillary is even weaker on the border and immigration than Obama. I don’t see any evidence she’d continue deporting those people.

WALLACE: Secretary Clinton, I want to…

CLINTON: We will not have open borders. That is…

WALLACE: Well, let me — Secretary…

CLINTON: That is a rank mischaracterization.

WALLACE: Secretary Clinton…

CLINTON: We will have secure borders, but we’ll also have reform. And this used to be a bipartisan issue. Ronald Reagan was the last president…

WALLACE: Secretary Clinton, excuse me. Secretary Clinton.

CLINTON: … to sign immigration reform, and George W. Bush supported it, as well.

WALLACE: Secretary Clinton, I want to clear up your position on this issue, because in a speech you gave to a Brazilian bank, for which you were paid $225,000, we’ve learned from the WikiLeaks, that you said this, and I want to quote. “My dream is a hemispheric common market with open trade and open borders.” So that’s the question…

TRUMP: Thank you.

WALLACE: That’s the question. Please quiet, everybody. Is that your dream, open borders?

CLINTON: Well, if you went on to read the rest of the sentence, I was talking about energy. You know, we trade more energy with our neighbors than we trade with the rest of the world combined. And I do want us to have an electric grid, an energy system that crosses borders. I think that would be a great benefit to us.

But you are very clearly quoting from WikiLeaks. And what’s really important about WikiLeaks is that the Russian government has engaged in espionage against Americans. They have hacked American websites, American accounts of private people, of institutions. Then they have given that information to WikiLeaks for the purpose of putting it on the Internet.

This has come from the highest levels of the Russian government, clearly, from Putin himself, in an effort, as 17 of our intelligence agencies have confirmed, to influence our election.

CLINTON: So I actually think the most important question of this evening, Chris, is, finally, will Donald Trump admit and condemn that the Russians are doing this and make it clear that he will not have the help of Putin in in this election, that he rejects Russian espionage against Americans, which he actually encouraged in the past? Those are the questions we need answered. We’ve never had anything like this happen in any of our elections before.

WALLACE: Well?

TRUMP: That was a great pivot off the fact that she wants open borders, OK? How did we get on to Putin?

WALLACE: Hold on — hold on, wait. Hold on, folks. Because we — this is going to end up getting out of control. Let’s try to keep it quiet so — for the candidates and for the American people.

TRUMP: Here’s something I can’t help but be amazed by…

WALLACE: Yes?

TRUMP: Hillary runs away from the immigration question, because at some point she knows it’s going to come around to the fact she wants to take 550 percent more Syrian refugees than Obama has brought in and the American people are going to go ballistic if and when the media ever decides to cover it, and we’ve got no way to vet them and find out who’s with ISIS and who’s with Al Qaeda, or Hamas or whoever, and instead she’s got to scream about Putin.

So fine. We won’t talk about radical Islamic terrorism, and how her policies are the greatest gift the jihadists could ever get. Instead we’ll talk about Putin.

Now we can talk about Putin. I don’t know Putin. He said nice things about me. If we got along well, that would be good. If Russia and the United States got along well and went after ISIS, that would be good. That doesn’t mean we’re going to give him anything that’s not in our interest to give; it doesn’t have to be that way.

He has no respect for her. He has no respect for our president. And I’ll tell you what: We’re in very serious trouble, because we have a country with tremendous numbers of nuclear warheads — 1,800, by the way — where they expanded and we didn’t, 1,800 nuclear warheads. And she’s playing chicken. Look, Putin…

WALLACE: Wait, but…

TRUMP: … from everything I see, has no respect for this person.

CLINTON: Well, that’s because he’d rather have a puppet as president of the United States.

TRUMP: I’m a puppet? Are you serious?

CLINTON: And it’s pretty clear…

TRUMP: You gave Russia half our uranium, for crying out loud. You did it because you got millions of dollars for your crooked foundation. Who are you to call anybody else a puppet?

CLINTON: It’s pretty clear you won’t admit…

TRUMP: That’s rich, even by your standards.

CLINTON: … that the Russians have engaged in cyberattacks against the United States of America, that you encouraged espionage against our people, that you are willing to spout the Putin line, sign up for his wish list, break up NATO, do whatever he wants to do, and that you continue to get help from him, because he has a very clear favorite in this race.

So I think that this is such an unprecedented situation. We’ve never had a foreign government trying to interfere in our election. We have 17 — 17 intelligence agencies, civilian and military, who have all concluded that these espionage attacks, these cyberattacks, come from the highest levels of the Kremlin and they are designed to influence our election. I find that deeply disturbing.

WALLACE: Secretary Clinton…

CLINTON: And I think it’s time you take a stand…

TRUMP: I love how Hillary, who puts our state secrets on a private server in some guy’s bathroom, all of a sudden is a big cybersecurity expert.

CLINTON: I am not quoting myself.

TRUMP: She has no idea.

CLINTON: I am quoting 17…

TRUMP: The last person in America who ought to be talking about cybersecurity is you.

CLINTON: … 17 intelligence — do you doubt 17 military and civilian…

TRUMP: Hell, your idea of cybersecurity is your IT guy taking the Fifth.

CLINTON: … agencies.

TRUMP: Yeah, I doubt it. I doubt it.

CLINTON: Well, he’d rather believe Vladimir Putin than the military and civilian intelligence professionals who are sworn to protect us. I find that just absolutely…

(CROSSTALK)

TRUMP: She doesn’t like Putin because Putin has outsmarted her at every step of the way.

WALLACE: Mr. Trump…

TRUMP: Excuse me. Putin has outsmarted her in Syria.

WALLACE: Mr. Trump…

(CROSSTALK)

TRUMP: He’s outsmarted her every step of the way.

WALLACE: I do get to ask some questions.

TRUMP: Yes, that’s fine.

WALLACE: And I would like to ask you this direct question. The top national security officials of this country do believe that Russia has been behind these hacks. Even if you don’t know for sure whether they are, do you condemn any interference by Russia in the American election?

TRUMP: By Russia or anybody else.

WALLACE: You condemn their interference?

TRUMP: Of course I condemn it.

WALLACE: I’m not asking — I’m asking do you condemn?

TRUMP: Here’s what I don’t get. Let’s say that for the first time in her whole life Hillary isn’t wrong about cybersecurity and it was the Russians who hacked her server and John Podesta’s server and the DNC. It’s a surprise that they hacked her and her friends? Like I said, she had an unsecured private server in some guy’s bathroom. All she had to do is use the government server like everybody else and it was for one thing less trouble than she actually went through and for another it’s a lot less likely the Russians or whoever could hack it.

They hack us, we hack them – she’s not a child. She knows this. So why doesn’t she do what she needs to protect herself and our confidential information? Because she doesn’t care, that’s why. She wanted everything on a private server, because if it’s private you can’t do a FOIA request and find out what she’s doing. If she’s shaking down the Saudis for her foundation and promising them access and influence on policy, you don’t find out. And then she spends a lot of money on BleachBit to erase all those 33,000 emails she says are wedding plans and yoga routines and so on, which is a pretty obvious lie.

She leaves all this wide open and the Russians, or Chinese or whoever go and get everything, and when somebody gives stuff to Wikileaks and makes her look bad when she’s running for president NOW it’s a national security issue. She had nothing to say when the Russians were getting control of our uranium to go build and modernize all their nuclear weapons thanks to her, but this gets her all hot under the collar?

I gotta say it – it’s pathetic. You’re pathetic. And you want to accuse me of being Putin’s puppet after the mess you’ve made? Where do you get off?

WALLACE: We’re a long way away from immigration, but I’m going to let you finish this topic. You got about 45 seconds.

TRUMP: She’s really not a serious presidential candidate. How she’s treated like one is beyond me.

CLINTON: I — I find it ironic that he’s raising nuclear weapons. This is a person who has been very cavalier, even casual about the use of nuclear weapons. He’s…

TRUMP: Wrong.

CLINTON: … advocated more countries getting them, Japan, Korea, even Saudi Arabia. He said, well, if we have them, why don’t we use them, which I think is terrifying.

But here’s the deal. The bottom line on nuclear weapons is that when the president gives the order, it must be followed. There’s about four minutes between the order being given and the people responsible for launching nuclear weapons to do so. And that’s why 10 people who have had that awesome responsibility have come out and, in an unprecedented way, said they would not trust Donald Trump with the nuclear codes or to have his finger on the nuclear button.

TRUMP: I have 200 generals…

WALLACE: Very quickly.

TRUMP: … and admirals, 21 endorsing me, 21 congressional Medal of Honor recipients. As far as Japan and other countries, we are being ripped off by everybody in the — we’re defending other countries. We are spending a fortune doing it. They have the bargain of the century.

All I said is, we have to renegotiate these agreements, because our country cannot afford to defend Saudi Arabia, Japan, Germany, South Korea, and many other places. We cannot continue to afford — she took that as saying nuclear weapons.

WALLACE: OK.

TRUMP: Look, she’s been proven to be a liar on so many different ways. This is just another lie.

CLINTON: Well, I’m just quoting you when you were asked…

TRUMP: There’s no quote. You’re not going to find a quote from me.

CLINTON: … about a potential nuclear — nuclear competition in Asia, you said, you know, go ahead, enjoy yourselves, folks. That kind…

TRUMP: And defend yourselves.

CLINTON: … of language — well…

TRUMP: How is it an irresponsible position that Japan and South Korea might end up with nukes? That isn’t different from Britain and France having nukes, and nobody is afraid of them having some. If they’re going to be threatened by North Korea, what’s wrong with them having a deterrent if they want one? Those are peaceful countries. They’re not North Korea.

CLINTON: The United States has kept the peace — the United States has kept the peace through our alliances. Donald wants to tear up our alliances. I think it makes the world safer and, frankly, it makes the United States safer. I would work with our allies in Asia, in Europe, in the Middle East, and elsewhere. That’s the only way we’re going to be able to keep the peace.

WALLACE: We’re going to — no, we are going to move on to the next topic, which is the economy. And I hope we handle that as well as we did immigration. You also have very different ideas about how to get the economy growing faster. Secretary Clinton, in your plan, government plays a big role. You see more government spending, more entitlements, more tax credits, more tax penalties. Mr. Trump, you want to get government out with lower taxes and less regulation.

TRUMP: Yes.

WALLACE: We’re going to drill down into this a little bit more. But in this overview, please explain to me why you believe that your plan will create more jobs and growth for this country and your opponent’s plan will not. In this round, you go first, Secretary Clinton.

CLINTON: Well, I think when the middle class thrives, America thrives. And so my plan is based on growing the economy, giving middle-class families many more opportunities. I want us to have the biggest jobs program since World War II, jobs in infrastructure and advanced manufacturing. I think we can compete with high-wage countries, and I believe we should. New jobs and clean energy, not only to fight climate change, which is a serious problem, but to create new opportunities and new businesses.

I want us to do more to help small business. That’s where two- thirds of the new jobs are going to come from. I want us to raise the national minimum wage, because people who live in poverty should not — who work full-time should not still be in poverty. And I sure do want to make sure women get equal pay for the work we do.

I feel strongly that we have to have an education system that starts with preschool and goes through college. That’s why I want more technical education in high schools and in community colleges, real apprenticeships to prepare young people for the jobs of the future. I want to make college debt-free and for families making less than $125,000, you will not get a tuition bill from a public college or university if the plan that I worked on with Bernie Sanders is enacted.

And we’re going to work hard to make sure that it is, because we are going to go where the money is. Most of the gains in the last years since the Great Recession have gone to the very top. So we are going to have the wealthy pay their fair share. We’re going to have corporations make a contribution greater than they are now to our country.

That is a plan that has been analyzed by independent experts which said that it could produce 10 million new jobs. By contrast, Donald’s plan has been analyzed to conclude it might lose 3.5 million jobs. Why? Because his whole plan is to cut taxes, to give the biggest tax breaks ever to the wealthy and to corporations, adding $20 trillion to our debt, and causing the kind of dislocation that we have seen before, because it truly will be trickle-down economics on steroids.

So the plan I have I think will actually produce greater opportunities. The plan he has will cost us jobs and possibly lead to another Great Recession.

WALLACE: Secretary, thank you. Mr. Trump, why will your plan create more jobs and growth than Secretary Clinton’s?

TRUMP: Well, first of all, before I start on my plan, her plan is going to raise taxes and even double your taxes. Her tax plan is a disaster. We can consider some options on a bipartisan basis to reform access to college, because there are some structural market deficiencies that policy changes could remedy, but you’re certainly not going to fix much of anything if you take rich people to the woodshed with tax increases. I don’t think people understand just how massive a tax increase it is that she’s proposing, and on people who are already shouldering a sizable majority of the tax burden as it is.

And then she’s going to accuse me of starting a Great Recession and costing jobs. I don’t know if it’s that she’s clueless or if it’s that she thinks the American people are, but what she’s saying is complete nonsense. It’s stupid.

Anybody will tell you that if you tax something you’re going to end up with less of it. That’s just common sense. It’s the same thing as raising prices – people will buy less of what you’re selling. Anybody who’s ever worked in the private sector is going to understand that – maybe it’s that Hillary doesn’t have any of that experience and so how would she know?

I’ve talked a lot about trade in this campaign. You couple us getting a lot smarter about trade and doing something to protect our interests – which as Secretary of State she had as part of her job description and did absolutely ZERO about it – and my tax plan, and all of a sudden we’re going to have an economic boom. I’m not kidding. She talks about the Great Recession, and I go all over the country and what I hear is that the Great Recession never really ended. Factories closed, the jobs go overseas, the capital gets parked offshore. Lots of places around the country where we used to make things and now people are drawing disability and food stamps and working odd jobs to put shoes on their kids’ feet. It stinks like decline all over the country, and she was part of it getting this way.

Let’s not forget – this housing crisis that set off the recession came from her and her husband the last time somebody let them in the White House. The Clintons expanded this law called the Community Reinvestment Act, and essentially what it did was to force banks to write mortgage loans to people who couldn’t afford the payments. That screwed up the housing market, and lots of people bought houses they couldn’t afford. Excess demand creates excess supply, and you have a bubble. It busts, and the economy goes bust along with it. Hillary doesn’t want you to look into the fact she was in the middle of creating this problem from the get-go, and she had cronies who were at Fannie and Freddie and helped make it happen, who made millions and wiped out the economy. These guys are still part of her machine. Phillippe Raines, for example.

Rather than any more of that garbage, we’re going to incentivize real economic activity. We’re going to incentivize all that overseas capital to come back here and get invested in real jobs for real folks making the country great again. We’re going to have people starting businesses again. Did you know that every year Obama’s been in office there have been fewer businesses open in America than the year before?

That’s going to change. We’re going to do it — we’re going to go a separate way, because it has been a disaster. We are going to cut taxes massively. We’re going to cut business taxes massively. They’re going to start hiring people. We’re going to bring the $2.5 trillion…

WALLACE: Time, Mr. Trump.

TRUMP: … that’s offshore back into the country. We are going to start the engine rolling again, because…

WALLACE: Mr. Trump?

TRUMP: … right now, our country is dying at 1 percent GDP.

CLINTON: Well, let me translate that, if I can, Chris, because…

TRUMP: You can’t.

CLINTON: … the fact is, he’s going to advocate for the largest tax cuts we’ve ever seen, three times more than the tax cuts under the Bush administration. I have said repeatedly throughout this campaign: I will not raise taxes on anyone making $250,000 or less.

I also will not add a penny to the debt. I have costed out what I’m going to do. He will, through his massive tax cuts, add $20 trillion to the debt.

Well, he mentioned the debt. We know how to get control of the debt. When my husband was president, we went from a $300 billion deficit to a $200 billion surplus and we were actually on the path to eliminating the national debt. When President Obama came into office, he inherited the worst economic disaster since the Great Depression. He has cut the deficit by two-thirds.

So, yes, one of the ways you go after the debt, one of the ways you create jobs is by investing in people. So I do have investments, investments in new jobs, investments in education, skill training, and the opportunities for people to get ahead and stay ahead. That’s the kind of approach that will work.

WALLACE: Secretary…

CLINTON: Cutting taxes on the wealthy, we’ve tried that. It has not worked the way that it has been promised.

WALLACE: Secretary Clinton, I want to pursue your plan, because in many ways it is similar to the Obama stimulus plan in 2009, which has led to the slowest GDP growth since 1949.

TRUMP: Correct.

WALLACE: Thank you, sir.

You told me in July when we spoke that the problem is that President Obama didn’t get to do enough in what he was trying to do with his stimulus. So is your plan basically more — even more of the Obama stimulus?

CLINTON: Well, it’s a combination, Chris. And let me say that when you inherit the level of economic catastrophe that President Obama inherited, it was a real touch-and-go situation. I was in the Senate before I became secretary of state. I’ve never seen people as physically distraught as the Bush administration team was because of what was happening to the economy.

I personally believe that the steps that President Obama took saved the economy. He doesn’t get the credit he deserves for taking some very hard positions. But it was a terrible recession.

So now we’ve dug ourselves out of it, we’re standing, but we’re not yet running. So what I am proposing is that we invest from the middle out and the ground up, not the top down. That is not going to work.

That’s why what I have put forward doesn’t add a penny to the debt, but it is the kind of approach that will enable more people to take those new jobs, higher-paying jobs. We’re beginning to see some increase in incomes, and we certainly have had a long string of increasing jobs. We’ve got to do more to get the whole economy moving, and that’s what I believe I will be able to do.

WALLACE: Mr. Trump, even conservative economists who have looked at your plan say that the numbers don’t add up, that your idea, and you’ve talked about 25 million jobs created, 4 percent…

TRUMP: Over a 10-year period.

WALLACE: … growth is unrealistic. And they say — you talk a lot about growing the energy industry. They say with oil prices as low as they are right now, that’s unrealistic, as well. Your response, sir?

TRUMP: Well, oil prices are actually starting to come back a little, so we’ll see how that works out. And let’s understand why they dropped as low as they did. They dropped because the Saudis control OPEC and the Saudis wanted to ramp up oil production to drive the price down and put all the American producers out of business because we’ve found so much oil here. Which they did, and it was predatory and Obama should have done something about it and of course he didn’t, but the interesting thing is it didn’t work. Our guys held on, and most of them survived, and the Saudis had to back off because they lost so much money they were turning into Greece.

And the Saudis have given Hillary $25 million for her foundation, so you can ask yourself whose president she would be.

So I just left some high representatives of India. They’re growing at 8 percent. China is growing at 7 percent. And that for them is a catastrophically low number.

We are growing — our last report came out — and it’s right around the 1 percent level. And I think it’s going down. Last week, as you know, the end of last week, they came out with an anemic jobs report. A terrible jobs report. In fact I said, is that the last jobs report before the election? Because if it is, I should win easily, it was so bad. The report was so bad.

We’re in a stagnant economy, but there is so much pent-up investment and productivity out there that if you get the right attitude and the right policies in the White House, somebody who actually wants to grow the economy rather than redistribute all the money, four percent growth is actually a modest figure.

But not if we’re stupid about it. Not if we sign this Trans-Pacific Partnership thing that Hillary is a big fan of…

WALLACE: I want you to give you a chance to briefly speak to that, and then I want to pivot to one-sixth of the economy…

TRUMP: And that will be as bad as NAFTA.

WALLACE: … which is Obamacare. But go ahead, briefly.

CLINTON: Well, first, let me say, number one, when I saw the final agreement for TPP, I said I was against it. It didn’t meet my test. I’ve had the same test. Does it create jobs, raise incomes, and further our national security? I’m against it now. I’ll be against it after the election. I’ll be against it when I’m president.

There’s only one of us on this stage who’s actually shipped jobs to Mexico, because that’s Donald. He’s shipped jobs to 12 countries, including Mexico.

But he mentioned China. And, you know, one of the biggest problems we have with China is the illegal dumping of steel and aluminum into our markets. I have fought against that as a senator. I’ve stood up against it as secretary of state.

Donald has bought Chinese steel and aluminum. In fact, the Trump Hotel right here in Las Vegas was made with Chinese steel. So he goes around with crocodile tears about how terrible it is, but he has given jobs to Chinese steelworkers, not American steelworkers.

WALLACE: Mr. Trump?

CLINTON: That’s the kind of approach that is just not going to work.

TRUMP: Chinese steel? Really?

CLINTON: We’re going to pull the country together. We’re going to have trade agreements that we enforce. That’s why I’m going to have a trade prosecutor for the first time in history. And we’re going to enforce those agreements, and we’re going to look for businesses to help us by buying American products.

WALLACE: Secretary Clinton? Go ahead, Mr. Trump.

TRUMP: Let me ask a simple question. She’s been doing this for 30 years. Why the hell didn’t you do it over the last 15, 20 years?

CLINTON: No, I voted.

TRUMP: You were very much involved — excuse me. My turn. You were very much involved in every aspect of this country. Very much. And you do have experience. I say the one thing you have over me is experience, but it’s bad experience, because what you’ve done has turned out badly.

And the result of you being in politics 30 years is somebody like me who’s actually building things and creating jobs is buying steel from China because you’ve destroyed the steel industry in America. Who are you to criticize me for business decisions I’ve made, anyway? I operate in an environment you and your politician pals create, and I do the best I can within that environment even though it infuriates me to make some of the decisions I have to make, and you want to sit on your perch and tell me how to create jobs? What jobs have you created? Zero. Zeee-ro.

The problem is, you talk, but you don’t get anything done, Hillary. You don’t. Just like when you ran the State Department, $6 billion was missing. How do you miss $6 billion? You ran the State Department, $6 billion was either stolen. They don’t know. It’s gone, $6 billion. If you become president, this country is going to be in some mess. Believe me.

CLINTON: Well, first of all, what he just said about the State Department is not only untrue, it’s been debunked numerous times.

CLINTON: But I think it’s really an important issue. He raised the 30 years of experience, so let me just talk briefly about that. You know, back in the 1970s, I worked for the Children’s Defense Fund. And I was taking on discrimination against African-American kids in schools. He was getting sued by the Justice Department for racial discrimination in his apartment buildings.

In the 1980s, I was working to reform the schools in Arkansas. He was borrowing $14 million from his father to start his businesses. In the 1990s, I went to Beijing and I said women’s rights are human rights. He insulted a former Miss Universe, Alicia Machado, called her an eating machine.

TRUMP: Hear that? Never had a real job in her life and she’s going to trash somebody who’s created thousands of them.

CLINTON: And on the day when I was in the Situation Room, monitoring the raid that brought Osama bin Laden to justice, he was hosting the “Celebrity Apprentice.” So I’m happy to compare my 30 years of experience, what I’ve done for this country, trying to help in every way I could, especially kids and families get ahead and stay ahead, with your 30 years, and I’ll let the American people make that decision.

TRUMP: Well, I think I did a much better job. I built a massive company, a great company, some of the greatest assets anywhere in the world, worth many, many billions of dollars. I started with a $1 million loan. I agree with that. It’s a $1 million loan. But I built a phenomenal company.

And if we could run our country the way I’ve run my company, we would have a country that you would be so proud of. You would even be proud of it.

Hey by the way, Hillary – are you really going to take credit for killing Osama bin Laden? I saw Zero Dark Thirty. Great movie. Who played you in that?

WALLACE: All right. We are going to get to foreign hot spots in a few moments, but the next segment is fitness to be president of the United States. Mr. Trump, at the last debate, you said your talk about grabbing women was just that, talk, and that you’d never actually done it. And since then, as we all know, nine women have come forward and have said that you either groped them or kissed them without their consent.

Why would so many different women from so many different circumstances over so many different years, why would they all in this last couple of weeks make up — you deny this — why would they all make up these stories?

Since this is a question for both of you, Secretary Clinton, Mr. Trump says what your husband did and that you defended was even worse. Mr. Trump, you go first.

TRUMP: Well, first of all, those stories have been largely debunked. Those people — I don’t know those people. I have a feeling how they came. I believe it was her campaign that did it.

Just like if you look at what came out today on the clips where I was wondering what happened with my rally in Chicago and other rallies where we had such violence? She’s the one and Obama that caused the violence. They hired people — they paid them $1,500, and they’re on tape saying be violent, cause fights, do bad things.

I would say the only way — because those stories are all totally false, I have to say that. And I didn’t even apologize to my wife, who’s sitting right here, because I didn’t do anything. I didn’t know any of these — I didn’t see these women.

These women — the woman on the plane, the — I think they want either fame or her campaign did it. And I think it’s her campaign. Because what I saw what they did, which is a criminal act, by the way, where they’re telling people to go out and start fist-fights and start violence.

And I’ll tell you what, in particular in Chicago, people were hurt and people could have been killed in that riot. And that was now all on tape, started by her. I believe, Chris, that she got these people to step forward. If it wasn’t, they get their 10 minutes of fame. But they were all totally — it was all fiction. It was lies, and it was fiction.

CLINTON: Well…

WALLACE: Secretary Clinton?

CLINTON: At the last debate, we heard Donald talking about what he did to women. And after that, a number of women have come forward saying that’s exactly what he did to them. Now, what was his response? Well, he held a number of big rallies where he said that he could not possibly have done those things to those women because they were not attractive enough for them to be assaulted.

TRUMP: I did not say that. I did not say that.

CLINTON: In fact, he went on to say…

WALLACE: Her two minutes — sir, her two minutes. Her two minutes.

TRUMP: Besides, she’s the wrong person to be taking up for the poor women.

WALLACE: It’s her two minutes.

CLINTON: He went on to say, “Look at her. I don’t think so.” About another woman, he said, “That wouldn’t be my first choice.” He attacked the woman reporter writing the story, called her “disgusting,” as he has called a number of women during this campaign.

Donald thinks belittling women makes him bigger. He goes after their dignity, their self-worth, and I don’t think there is a woman anywhere who doesn’t know what that feels like. So we now know what Donald thinks and what he says and how he acts toward women. That’s who Donald is.

I think it’s really up to all of us to demonstrate who we are and who our country is, and to stand up and be very clear about what we expect from our next president, how we want to bring our country together, where we don’t want to have the kind of pitting of people one against the other, where instead we celebrate our diversity, we lift people up, and we make our country even greater.

America is great, because America is good. And it really is up to all of us to make that true, now and in the future, and particularly for our children and our grandchildren.

WALLACE: Mr. Trump…

TRUMP: They’ve got all these people coming out of the woodwork, and I’ve never met most of them. It’s all October Surprise garbage. It’s how the Clintons do politics. Meanwhile she’s acting like I’m this terrible guy because this one said this and that one said that, and all the women her husband abused – we just had another one come out today, very nice lady and the story she told was disgusting. He’s a pervert. She stayed quiet for a long time, and one reason she did was that she said she saw the way Hillary and the Clinton gang went out to destroy the ones who came out in the 1990’s. Juanita Broaddrick and Paula Jones, and she was afraid. She was afraid of Hillary, and what Hillary would do, because she saw how Hillary enabled him and went after them.

So let’s not go and pretent like Hillary is somebody who should be out there defending women she says were abused. You have no credibility to do that, and you ought to stop because it’s embarrassing. Just shut up already, please.

And I really want to just talk about something slightly different.

She mentions this, which is all fiction, all fictionalized, probably or possibly started by her and her very sleazy campaign. But I will tell you what isn’t fictionalized are her e-mails, where she destroyed 33,000 e-mails criminally, criminally, after getting a subpoena from the United States Congress.

What happened to the FBI, I don’t know. We have a great general, four-star general, today you read it in all of the papers, going to potentially serve five years in jail for lying to the FBI. One lie. She’s lied hundreds of times to the people, to Congress, and to the FBI. He’s going to probably go to jail. This is a four-star general. And she gets away with it, and she can run for the presidency of the United States? That’s really what you should be talking about, not fiction, where somebody wants fame or where they come out of her crooked campaign.

WALLACE: Secretary Clinton?

CLINTON: Well, every time Donald is pushed on something which is obviously uncomfortable, like what these women are saying, he immediately goes to denying responsibility. And it’s not just about women. He never apologizes or says he’s sorry for anything.

So we know what he has said and what he’s done to women. But he also went after a disabled reporter, mocked and mimicked him on national television.

TRUMP: Wrong.

CLINTON: He went after Mr. and Mrs. Khan, the parents of a young man who died serving our country, a Gold Star family, because of their religion. He went after John McCain, a prisoner of war, said he prefers “people who aren’t captured.” He went after a federal judge, born in Indiana, but who Donald said couldn’t be trusted to try the fraud and racketeering case against Trump University because his parents were Mexican.

So it’s not one thing. This is a pattern, a pattern of divisiveness, of a very dark and in many ways dangerous vision of our country, where he incites violence, where he applauds people who are pushing and pulling and punching at his rallies. That is not who America is.

And I hope that as we move in the last weeks of this campaign, more and more people will understand what’s at stake in this election. It really does come down to what kind of country we are going to have.

TRUMP: So sad when she talks about violence at my rallies, and she caused the violence. It’s on tape.

WALLACE: During the last…

TRUMP: Ask her who Bob Creamer is and why he all of a sudden had to quit working on her campaign.

WALLACE: OK.

TRUMP: Go ahead, ask her. He’s an ex-con, and he’s spent the last eight years at the White House at least once a week. Helped write Obamacare and the Iran Deal and it’s his guys who hire people to start fistfights at our campaign events.

WALLACE: In this bucket about fitness to be president, there’s been a lot of developments over the last 10 days since the last debate. I’d like to ask you about them. These are questions that the American people have.

Secretary Clinton, during your 2009 Senate confirmation hearing, you promised to avoid even the appearance of a conflict of interest with your dealing with the Clinton Foundation while you were secretary of state, but e-mails show that donors got special access to you. Those seeking grants for Haiti relief were considered separately from non-donors, and some of those donors got contracts, government contracts, taxpayer money.

Can you really say that you kept your pledge to that Senate committee? And why isn’t what happened and what went on between you and the Clinton Foundation, why isn’t it what Mr. Trump calls pay to play?

CLINTON: Well, everything I did as secretary of state was in furtherance of our country’s interests and our values. The State Department has said that. I think that’s been proven.

But I am happy, in fact I’m thrilled to talk about the Clinton Foundation, because it is a world-renowned charity and I am so proud of the work that it does. You know, I could talk for the rest of the debate — I know I don’t have the time to do that.

But just briefly, the Clinton Foundation made it possible for 11 million people around the world with HIV-AIDS to afford treatment, and that’s about half all the people in the world who are getting treatment. In partnership with the American Health Association…

WALLACE: Secretary Clinton…

CLINTON: … we have made environments in schools healthier for kids, including healthier lunches…

WALLACE: Secretary Clinton, respectfully, this is — this is an open discussion.

CLINTON: Well, it is an open discussion. And you…

WALLACE: And the specific question went to pay for play. Do you want to talk about that?

CLINTON: Well, but there is no — but there is no evidence — but there is…

(CROSSTALK)

TRUMP: I think that it’s been very well…

WALLACE: Let’s ask Mr. Trump.

CLINTON: There is a lot of evidence about the very good work…

TRUMP: It’s been very well studied.

CLINTON: … and the high rankings…

(CROSSTALK)

WALLACE: Please let me Mr. Trump speak.

TRUMP: … and it’s a criminal enterprise, and so many people know it.

WALLACE: Please let Mr. Trump speak.

(CROSSTALK)

TRUMP: It’s a criminal enterprise. Saudi Arabia giving $25 million, Qatar, all of these countries. You talk about women and women’s rights? So these are people that push gays off business — off buildings. These are people that kill women and treat women horribly. And yet you take their money.

So I’d like to ask you right now, why don’t you give back the money that you’ve taken from certain countries that treat certain groups of people so horribly? Why don’t you give back the money? I think it would be a great gesture.

Because she takes a tremendous amount of money. And you take a look at the people of Haiti. I was at a little Haiti the other day in Florida. And I want to tell you, they hate the Clintons, because what’s happened in Haiti with the Clinton Foundation is a disgrace. And you know it, and they know it, and everybody knows it. You stole money you raised, saying it was going to earthquake relief in Haiti. Just scammed all those donors and left the Haitians high and dry.

WALLACE: Secretary Clinton?

CLINTON: Well, very quickly, we at the Clinton Foundation spend 90 percent — 90 percent of all the money that is donated on behalf of programs of people around the world and in our own country. I’m very proud of that. We have the highest rating from the watchdogs that follow foundations. And I’d be happy to compare what we do with the Trump Foundation, which took money from other people and bought a six- foot portrait of Donald. I mean, who does that? It just was astonishing.

But when it comes to Haiti, Haiti is the poorest country in our hemisphere. The earthquake and the hurricanes, it has devastated Haiti. Bill and I have been involved in trying to help Haiti for many years. The Clinton Foundation raised $30 million to help Haiti after the catastrophic earthquake and all of the terrible problems the people there had.

We have done things to help small businesses, agriculture, and so much else. And we’re going to keep working to help Haiti…

WALLACE: All right.

CLINTON: … because it’s an important part of the American experience.

TRUMP: They don’t want you to help them anymore. And by the way, your real number isn’t 90 percent to charity. Try SIX PERCENT. Complete scam.

(CROSSTALK)

TRUMP: I’d like to mention one thing. Trump Foundation, small foundation. People contribute, I contribute. The money goes 100 percent — 100 percent goes to different charities, including a lot of military. I don’t get anything. I don’t buy boats. I don’t buy planes. What happens — the money goes to them. Hers? SIX PERCENT. She keeps 94 percent for herself.

WALLACE: Wasn’t some of the money used to settle your lawsuits, sir?

TRUMP: No, it was — we put up the American flag. And that’s it. They put up the American flag. We fought for the right in Palm Beach to put up the American flag.

WALLACE: Right. But there was a penalty that was imposed by Palm Beach County, and the money came from your foundation…

TRUMP: There was. There was. And, by the way…

WALLACE: … instead of Mar-a-Lago or yourself, sir.

TRUMP: … the money — the money went to Fisher House, where they build houses — the money that you’re talking about went to Fisher House, where they build houses for veterans and disabled vets.

WALLACE: I want to get into one…

CLINTON: But, of course, there’s no way we can know whether any of that is true, because he hasn’t released his tax returns. He is the first candidate ever to run for president in the last 40-plus years who has not released his tax returns, so everything he says about charity or anything else, we can’t prove it. You can look at our tax returns. We’ve got them all out there.

But what is really troubling is that we learned in the last debate he has not paid a penny in federal income tax. And we were talking about immigrants a few minutes ago, Chris. You know, half of all immigrants — undocumented immigrants in our country — actually pay federal income tax. So we have undocumented immigrants in America who are paying more federal income tax than a billionaire. I find that just astonishing.

WALLACE: I want…

TRUMP: If you don’t allow people to carry forward business losses you’ll have a lot less business to tax. This didn’t use to be a controversial idea, at least not until Hillary decided she could politicize it. And you won’t find a single illegal immigrant who’s ever paid in his life what I pay even in a bad year in taxes. The whole statement is idiotic.

WALLACE: We…

TRUMP: And let me say something else.

WALLACE: But, no, we heard this…

TRUMP: She’s making charitable contributions that she writes off her taxes.

WALLACE: Mr. Trump, we — OK.

TRUMP: You know what she makes them to?

WALLACE: Folks, we heard this…

TRUMP: She makes them to the Clinton Foundation! That she makes millions of dollars off of!

WALLACE: Folks, we heard this…

TRUMP: You want to talk about my taxes because I took a loss and carried it forward?

CLINTON: Well, you know…

TRUMP: Here you are essentially making taxpayers subsidize your crooked charity by writing off your money with charitable contributions. I’m sitting in my apartment at Trump Tower the other day…

CLINTON: Made with Chinese steel.

TRUMP: But I will tell you, I sat there…

(LAUGHTER)

… I sat there watching ad after ad after ad, false ad. All paid for by your friends on Wall Street that gave so much money because they know you’re going to protect them. And, frankly, you should have changed the laws if carrying forward business losses is so terrible.

WALLACE: Mr. Trump…

TRUMP: But of course that’s about business, and wealth creation. Which you know nothing about. Nothing. You know how to trade political influence and get paid by the Saudis and Qatar and Gilbert Chagoury and Marc Rich, but that’s it.

WALLACE: Mr. Trump, I want to ask you about one last question in this topic. You have been warning at rallies recently that this election is rigged and that Hillary Clinton is in the process of trying to steal it from you.

Your running mate, Governor Pence, pledged on Sunday that he and you — his words — “will absolutely accept the result of this election.” Today your daughter, Ivanka, said the same thing. I want to ask you here on the stage tonight: Do you make the same commitment that you will absolutely — sir, that you will absolutely accept the result of this election?

TRUMP: Absolutely? Shouldn’t that depend on the circumstances?

I will look at it at the time.

Look, I’m still processing what I saw on James O’Keefe’s videos. This guy Creamer, who works for Hillary only now he had to quit because he’s busted on that tape, they’re sending goons to rallies to start fights and they’re talking about massive vote fraud. John Podesta’s server is full of reporters letting him play editor, which calls into question whether there is any objectivity in the media at all, so I’m not sure how you can trust that the public even finds out the truth. All of that is going on, there are reports around the country that they’re going to let illegals vote without even being citizens, and you want me to talk about absolutes?

I think it’s the wrong time to do that. And you know me – I like to keep my options open whenever I can.

Hopefully the voters will see through all the sleaze her campaign has covered this election with and it’s a good night for America on November 8.

WALLACE: But, sir, there’s…

TRUMP: What was the number that came out this week? Four million dead people on the voter rolls around the country?

Not to mention the fact that it’s pretty clear she’s guilty of violating a federal law with those e-mails. You saw that exchange between Comey – who ought to resign, he’s been disgraceful – and Trey Gowdy where Gowdy pretty much gets him to admit she absolutely violated the law but Comey won’t say she ought to be prosecuted because he says there has to be criminal intent. She’s totally got criminal intent and there’s tons of evidence of that, but the statute doesn’t even require it. She’s completely guilty, and one thing in the statute is that you can never hold federal office again. Just like with David Petraeus, who got caught doing something similar and he’s banned from government service.

So Hillary wouldn’t even be eligible to hold the office she’s running for, and they had to rig it with DOJ and FBI so she can even run. I don’t know how that’s not a deeply corrupt system, and it ought to scare every American that this is where we are. And just in that respect, I say it’s rigged, because she should never…

WALLACE: But…

TRUMP: Chris, she should never have been allowed to run for the presidency based on what she did with e-mails and so many other things.

WALLACE: But, sir, there is a tradition in this country — in fact, one of the prides of this country — is the peaceful transition of power and that no matter how hard-fought a campaign is, that at the end of the campaign that the loser concedes to the winner. Not saying that you’re necessarily going to be the loser or the winner, but that the loser concedes to the winner and that the country comes together in part for the good of the country. Are you saying you’re not prepared now to commit to that principle?

TRUMP: The principle, I support. But what we have now is a problem. Can I at least look at doing what Al Gore did if I have reason to believe she’s stealing the election?

CLINTON: Well, Chris, let me respond to that, because that’s horrifying. You know, every time Donald thinks things are not going in his direction, he claims whatever it is, is rigged against him.

The FBI conducted a year-long investigation into my e-mails. They concluded there was no case; he said the FBI was rigged. He lost the Iowa caucus. He lost the Wisconsin primary. He said the Republican primary was rigged against him. Then Trump University gets sued for fraud and racketeering; he claims the court system and the federal judge is rigged against him. There was even a time when he didn’t get an Emmy for his TV program three years in a row and he started tweeting that the Emmys were rigged against him.

TRUMP: Should have gotten it.

(LAUGHTER)

CLINTON: This is — this is a mindset. This is how Donald thinks. And it’s funny, but it’s also really troubling.

WALLACE: OK.

CLINTON: So that is not the way our democracy works. We’ve been around for 240 years. We’ve had free and fair elections. We’ve accepted the outcomes when we may not have liked them. And that is what must be expected of anyone standing on a debate stage during a general election. You know, President Obama said the other day when you’re whining before the game is even finished…

(APPLAUSE)

WALLACE: Hold on. Hold on, folks. Hold on, folks.

CLINTON: … it just shows you’re not up to doing the job. And let’s — you know, let’s be clear about what he is saying and what that means. He is denigrating — he’s talking down our democracy. And I, for one, am appalled that somebody who is the nominee of one of our two major parties would take that kind of position.

TRUMP: I think what the FBI did and what the Department of Justice did, including meeting with her husband, the attorney general, in the back of an airplane on the tarmac in Arizona, I think it’s disgraceful. I think it’s a disgrace. You don’t get to be appalled, Hillary. It’s us who are appalled at you.

WALLACE: All right.

TRUMP: I think we’ve never had a situation so bad in this country.

(APPLAUSE)

WALLACE: Hold on, folks. This doesn’t do any good for anyone. Let’s please continue the debate, and let’s move on to the subject of foreign hot spots.

The Iraqi offensive to take back Mosul has begun. If they are successful in pushing ISIS out of that city and out of all of Iraq, the question then becomes, what happens the day after? And that’s something that whichever of you ends up — whoever of you ends up as president is going to have to confront.

Will you put U.S. troops into that vacuum to make sure that ISIS doesn’t come back or isn’t replaced by something even worse? Secretary Clinton, you go first in this segment. You have two minutes.

CLINTON: Well, I am encouraged that there is an effort led by the Iraqi army, supported by Kurdish forces, and also given the help and advice from the number of special forces and other Americans on the ground. But I will not support putting American soldiers into Iraq as an occupying force. I don’t think that is in our interest, and I don’t think that would be smart to do. In fact, Chris, I think that would be a big red flag waving for ISIS to reconstitute itself.

The goal here is to take back Mosul. It’s going to be a hard fight. I’ve got no illusions about that. And then continue to press into Syria to begin to take back and move on Raqqa, which is the ISIS headquarters.

I am hopeful that the hard work that American military advisers have done will pay off and that we will see a real — a really successful military operation. But we know we’ve got lots of work to do. Syria will remain a hotbed of terrorism as long as the civil war, aided and abetted by the Iranians and the Russians, continue.

So I have said, look, we need to keep our eye on ISIS. That’s why I want to have an intelligence surge that protects us here at home, why we have to go after them from the air, on the ground, online, why we have to make sure here at home we don’t let terrorists buy weapons. If you’re too dangerous to fly, you’re too dangerous to buy a gun.

And I’m going to continue to push for a no-fly zone and safe havens within Syria not only to help protect the Syrians and prevent the constant outflow of refugees, but to, frankly, gain some leverage on both the Syrian government and the Russians so that perhaps we can have the kind of serious negotiation necessary to bring the conflict to an end and go forward on a political track.

WALLACE: Mr. Trump, same question. If we are able to push ISIS out of Mosul and out of Iraq, will — would you be willing to put U.S. troops in there to prevent their return or something else?

TRUMP: Let me tell you, Mosul is so sad. We had Mosul. But when she left, when she took everybody out, we lost Mosul. Now we’re fighting again to get Mosul. The problem with Mosul and what they wanted to do is they wanted to get the leaders of ISIS who they felt were in Mosul.

About three months ago, I started reading that they want to get the leaders and they’re going to attack Mosul. Whatever happened to the element of surprise, OK? We announce we’re going after Mosul. I have been reading about going after Mosul now for about — how long is it, Hillary, three months? These people have all left. They’ve all left.

The element of surprise. Douglas MacArthur, George Patton spinning in their graves when they see the stupidity of our country. So we’re now fighting for Mosul, that we had. All she had to do was stay there, and now we’re going in to get it.

But you know who the big winner in Mosul is going to be after we eventually get it? And the only reason they did it is because she’s running for the office of president and they want to look tough. They want to look good. He violated the red line in the sand, and he made so many mistakes, made all the mistakes. That’s why we have the great migration. But she wanted to look good for the election. So they’re going in.

But who’s going to get Mosul, really? We’ll take Mosul eventually. But the way — if you look at what’s happening, much tougher than they thought. Much, much tougher. Much more dangerous. Going to be more deaths that they thought.

But the leaders that we wanted to get are all gone because they’re smart. They say, what do we need this for? So Mosul is going to be a wonderful thing. And Iran should write us a letter of thank you, just like the really stupid — the stupidest deal of all time, a deal that’s going to give Iran absolutely nuclear weapons. Iran should write us yet another letter saying thank you very much, because Iran, as I said many years ago, Iran is taking over Iraq, something they’ve wanted to do forever, but we’ve made it so easy for them.

Because let’s not kid ourselves. The government of Iraq? You want to talk about puppets, Hillary – the Iraqi government is Iran’s puppet. It didn’t have to be that way, but you were the Secretary of State. It was your job to negotiate a status-of-forces agreement at the end of the Iraq War, that we won. Maybe we should never have gone in there in the first place, but we had won. Iraq was quiet. All we had to do was get that agreement and we could stay there a little longer to make sure the place would stay stable, but no. You didn’t get that agreement and we pulled everybody out, and then Al Qaeda in Iraq who we had run out of the country came back in as ISIS and now they have Mosul. And the Iraqis are Iran’s puppets and all the Sunnis in the north and west of the country had just as soon align with ISIS as with the shiite government that’s Iran’s puppet. It’s a colossal mess and we can’t even really fix it thanks to the mistakes you made.

WALLACE: Sir, your two minutes are up.

TRUMP: The point is, the big winner is going to be Iran. The loser? We’re the loser.

CLINTON: Well, you know, once again, Donald is implying that he didn’t support the invasion of Iraq. I said it was a mistake. I’ve said that years ago. He has consistently denied what is…

TRUMP: Wrong.

CLINTON: … a very clear fact that…

TRUMP: Wrong.

CLINTON: … before the invasion, he supported it. And, you know, I just want everybody to go Google it. Google “Donald Trump Iraq.” And you will see the dozens of sources which verify that he was for the invasion of Iraq.

TRUMP: It’s a lie, but it doesn’t matter anyway. Her getting us out, whether we should have been in or not, is what created ISIS.

CLINTON: And you can actually hear the audio of him saying that. Now, why does that matter? Well, it matters because he has not told the truth about that position. I guess he believes it makes him look better now to contrast with me because I did vote for it.

But what’s really important here is to understand all the interplay. Mosul is a Sunni city. Mosul is on the border of Syria. And, yes, we do need to go after Baghdadi, and — just like we went after bin Laden, while you were doing “Celebrity Apprentice,” and we brought him to justice. We need to go after the leadership.

But we need to get rid of them, get rid of their fighters. There are an estimated several thousand fighters in Mosul. They’ve been digging underground. They’ve been prepared to defend. It’s going to be tough fighting. But I think we can take back Mosul, and then we can move on into Syria and take back Raqqa.

This is what we have to do. I’m just amazed that he seems to think that the Iraqi government and our allies and everybody else launched the attack on Mosul to help me in this election, but that’s how Donald thinks. You know, he always is looking for some conspiracy.

TRUMP: Conspiracy nothing. You lie and deny, but all of this is your failure.

CLINTON: He has all the conspiracy theories…

(CROSSTALK)

TRUMP: Iran is taking over Iraq.

WALLACE: Secretary Clinton, it’s…

(CROSSTALK)

TRUMP: Iran is taking over Iraq. We don’t gain anything even if we do help them retake Mosul.

CLINTON: This conspiracy theory, which he’s been spewing out for quite some time.

(CROSSTALK)

WALLACE: Secretary, please let Mr. Trump speak.

CLINTON: … unfit, and he proves it every time he talks.

TRUMP: No, you are the one that’s unfit. You know, WikiLeaks just actually came out — John Podesta said some horrible things about you, and, boy, was he right. He said some beauties. And you know, Bernie Sanders, he said you have bad judgment. You do.

Should we maybe talk about your Libya policy? What a beauty that was. You killed Qaddafi and turned the place into a haven for jihadists, and there are four dead Americans and a whole country which is a failed state, and weapons to Syrian rebels who probably ended up being ISIS.

CLINTON: Well, you should ask Bernie Sanders who he’s supporting for president. And he has said…

TRUMP: Which is a big mistake.

CLINTON: … as he has campaigned for me around the country, you are the most dangerous person to run for president in the modern history of America. I think he’s right.

WALLACE: Let’s turn to Aleppo. Mr. Trump, in the last debate, you were both asked about the situation in the Syrian city of Aleppo. And I want to follow up on that, because you said several things in that debate which were not true, sir. You said that Aleppo has basically fallen. In fact, there — in fact, there are…

TRUMP: It’s a catastrophe. I mean…

WALLACE: It’s a catastrophe, but there…

TRUMP: … it’s a mess.

WALLACE: There are a quarter of…

TRUMP: Have you seen it? Have you seen it?

WALLACE: Sir…

TRUMP: Have you seen what’s happening to Aleppo?

WALLACE: Sir, if I may finish my question…

TRUMP: OK, so it hasn’t fallen. Take a look at it.

WALLACE: Well, there are a quarter of a million people still living there and being slaughtered.

TRUMP: That’s right. And they are being slaughtered…

WALLACE: Yes.

TRUMP: … because of bad decisions.

WALLACE: If I may just finish here, and you also said that — that Syria and Russia are busy fighting ISIS. In fact, they have been the ones who’ve been bombing and shelling eastern Aleppo, and they just announced a humanitarian pause, in effect, admitting that they have been bombing and shelling Aleppo. Would you like to clear that up, sir?

TRUMP: Let’s pull back a little here. What have we done with Syria, which Aleppo is a symptom of?

We’re going to back the rebels in Syria. Sending them guns and training, to overthrow Assad. Now Assad is a bad guy, and he’s Iran’s guy and he’s Russia’s guy. What does that mean? Iran and Russia are going to make sure Assad doesn’t fall, and they’re hardly going to just sit there and let us take him down. So if we’re going to go that route, we’d better have a good guy we’re going to back. But who’s our good guy? The rebels? Who are we backing there? Who’s the good guy? We talk about this guy, that guy – each one is worse than the next. If there’s a Syrian George Washington we haven’t met him. We end up getting in bed with Al Qaeda, and half these people are ISIS. And amid this stupid policy, we’re putting ourselves in a position where we’re going to risk war with Russia over Syria.

Where is our national interest in that? You might want to ask Hillary, because this is what you get putting her in a position to set policy. Not to mention Assad is Iran’s guy. We’re going to fight Assad, we’re going to fight Iran. Maybe we should consider what we’re doing with Iran if we’re going to have a proxy war with them. We made Iran very powerful. We gave them $150 billion back. We give them $1.7 billion in cash. I mean, cash. Bundles of cash as big as this stage. We gave them $1.7 billion. How stupid is that?

So getting rid of Assad is not going to happen, and even if it did, how do you get rid of Assad and what replaces him isn’t something that looks like ISIS? You honestly couldn’t screw this up worse if you tried.

If she did nothing, we’d be in much better shape. And this is what’s caused the great migration, where she’s taking in tens of thousands of Syrian refugees, who probably in many cases — not probably, who are definitely…

WALLACE: Let me…

TRUMP: … in many cases, ISIS-aligned, and we now have them in our country, and wait until you see — this is going to be the great Trojan horse. And wait until you see what happens in the coming years. Lots of luck, Hillary. Thanks a lot for doing a great job.

WALLACE: Secretary Clinton, you have talked about — and in the last debate and again today — that you would impose a no-fly zone to try to protect the people of Aleppo and to stop the killing there. President Obama has refused to do that because he fears it’s going to draw us closer or deeper into the conflict.

And General Joseph Dunford, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, says you impose a no-fly zone, chances are you’re going to get into a war — his words — with Syria and Russia. So the question I have is, if you impose a no-fly zone — first of all, how do you respond to their concerns? Secondly, if you impose a no-fly zone and a Russian plane violates that, does President Clinton shoot that plane down?

CLINTON: Well, Chris, first of all, I think a no-fly zone could save lives and could hasten the end of the conflict. I’m well aware of the really legitimate concerns that you have expressed from both the president and the general.

This would not be done just on the first day. This would take a lot of negotiation. And it would also take making it clear to the Russians and the Syrians that our purpose here was to provide safe zones on the ground.

We’ve had millions of people leave Syria and those millions of people inside Syria who have been dislocated. So I think we could strike a deal and make it very clear to the Russians and the Syrians that this was something that we believe was in the best interests of the people on the ground in Syria, it would help us with our fight against ISIS.

But I want to respond to what Donald said about refugees. He’s made these claims repeatedly. I am not going to let anyone into this country who is not vetted, who we do not have confidence in. But I am not going to slam the door on women and children. That picture of that little 4-year-old boy in Aleppo, with the blood coming down his face while he sat in an ambulance, is haunting. And so we are going to do very careful, thorough vetting. That does not solve our internal challenges with ISIS and our need to stop radicalization, to work with American Muslim communities who are on the front lines to identify and prevent attacks. In fact, the killer of the dozens of people at the nightclub in Orlando, the Pulse nightclub, was born in Queens, the same place Donald was born. So let’s be clear about what the threat is and how we are best going to be able to meet it.

And, yes, some of that threat emanates from over in Syria and Iraq, and we’ve got to keep fighting, and I will defeat ISIS, and some of it is we have to up our game and be much smarter here at home.

WALLACE: Folks, I want to get into our final segment.

TRUMP: But I just have to…

WALLACE: Real quick.

TRUMP: It’s so ridiculous what she — she will defeat ISIS. We should have never let ISIS happen in the first place. And right now, they’re in 32 countries.

WALLACE: OK.

TRUMP: We should have — wait one second. They had a cease-fire three weeks ago. A cease-fire, the United States, Russia, and Syria. And during the cease-fire, Russia took over vast swatches of land, and then they said we don’t want the cease-fire anymore.

We are so outplayed on missiles, on cease-fires. They are outplayed. Now, she wasn’t there. I assume she had nothing to do with it. But our country is so outplayed by Putin and Assad, and by the way — and by Iran. Nobody can believe how stupid our leadership is.

WALLACE: Mr. Trump, Secretary Clinton — no, we need to move on to our final segment, and that is the national debt, which has not been discussed until tonight.

Our national debt, as a share of the economy, our GDP, is now 77 percent. That’s the highest since just after World War II. But the nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget says, Secretary Clinton, under your plan, debt would rise to 86 percent of GDP over the next 10 years. Mr. Trump, under your plan, they say it would rise to 105 percent of GDP over the next 10 years. The question is, why are both of you ignoring this problem? Mr. Trump, you go first.

TRUMP: Well, I say they’re wrong, because I’m going to create tremendous jobs. And we’re bringing GDP from, really, 1 percent, which is what it is now, and if she got in, it will be less than zero. But we’re bringing it from 1 percent up to 4 percent. And I actually think we can go higher than 4 percent. I think you can go to 5 percent or 6 percent. And if we do, you don’t have to bother asking your question, because we have a tremendous machine. We will have created a tremendous economic machine once again. To do that, we’re taking back jobs. We’re not going to let our companies be raided by other countries where we lose all our jobs, we don’t make our product anymore. It’s very sad. But I’m going to create a — the kind of a country that we were from the standpoint of industry. We used to be there. We’ve given it up. We’ve become very, very sloppy.

At the end of the day what I’m offering is prosperity. I understand it. I understand wealth creation. I’ll play the game well on trade, we’ll have a tax policy that grows the economy, people will be working and because they’re working they won’t be drawing money from the government, and the machine is gonna hum like it hasn’t been humming in decades. It’s really not as hard as people think once you have somebody in office who knows how the private sector and the economy actually works.

WALLACE: Secretary Clinton?

CLINTON: Well, first, when I hear Donald talk like that and know that his slogan is “Make America Great Again,” I wonder when he thought America was great. And before he rushes and says, “You know, before you and President Obama were there,” I think it’s important to recognize that he has been criticizing our government for decades.

You know, back in 1987, he took out a $100,000 ad in the New York Times, during the time when President Reagan was president, and basically said exactly what he just said now, that we were the laughingstock of the world. He was criticizing President Reagan. This is the way Donald thinks about himself, puts himself into, you know, the middle and says, “You know, I alone can fix it,” as he said on the convention stage.

But if you look at the debt, which is the issue you asked about, Chris, I pay for everything I’m proposing. I do not add a penny to the national debt. I take that very seriously, because I do think it’s one of the issues we’ve got to come to grips with.

So when I talk about how we’re going to pay for education, how we’re going to invest in infrastructure, how we’re going to get the cost of prescription drugs down, and a lot of the other issues that people talk to me about all the time, I’ve made it very clear we are going where the money is. We are going to ask the wealthy and corporations to pay their fair share.

And there is no evidence whatsoever that that will slow down or diminish our growth. In fact, I think just the opposite. We’ll have what economists call middle-out growth. We’ve got to get back to rebuilding the middle class, the families of America. That’s where growth will come from. That’s why I want to invest in you. I want to invest in your family.

And I think that’s the smartest way to grow the economy, to make the economy fairer. And we just have a big disagreement about this. It may be because of our experiences. You know, he started off with his dad as a millionaire…

TRUMP: Yeah, yeah, we’ve heard — we’ve heard this before, Hillary.

CLINTON: I started off with — my dad was a small-business man.

TRUMP: We’ve heard this before.

CLINTON: And I think it — you know, it’s a difference that affects how we see the world and what we want to do with the economy.

WALLACE: Time.

TRUMP: Thank you, Hillary. Could I just respond?

WALLACE: Well, no, sir, because we’re running out of time…

TRUMP: Because I did disagree with Ronald Reagan very strongly on trade. I disagreed with him. We should have been much tougher on trade even then. I’ve been waiting for years. Nobody does it right.

WALLACE: OK.

TRUMP: But I’ll absolutely take Reagan a hundred times before I’ll go with this pig-ignorant economics you bring to the table.

WALLACE: All right. The one last area I want to get into with you in this debate is the fact that the biggest driver of our debt is entitlements, which is 60 percent of all federal spending. Now, the Committee for federal — a Responsible Federal Budget has looked at both of your plans and they say neither of you has a serious plan that is going to solve the fact that Medicare’s going to run out of money in the 2020s, Social Security is going to run out of money in the 2030s, and at that time, recipients are going to take huge cuts in their benefits.

So, in effect, the final question I want to ask you in this regard is — and let me start with you, Mr. Trump, would President Trump make a deal to save Medicare and Social Security that included both tax increases and benefit cuts, in effect, a grand bargain on entitlements?

TRUMP: I’m cutting taxes. We’re going to grow the economy. It’s going to grow at a record rate of growth.

WALLACE: That’s not going to help in the entitlements.

TRUMP: Sure it will if you have people working and not on welfare or food stamps or so forth. And one thing we have to do: Repeal and replace the disaster known as Obamacare. It’s destroying our country. It’s destroying our businesses, our small business and our big businesses, which means putting people out of work who then access the entitlements. We have to repeal and replace Obamacare.

You take a look at the kind of numbers that that will cost us in the year ’17, it is a disaster. If we don’t repeal and replace — now, it’s probably going to die of its own weight. But Obamacare has to go. It’s — the premiums are going up 60 percent, 70 percent, 80 percent. Next year they’re going to go up over 100 percent.

And I’m really glad that the premiums have started — at least the people see what’s happening, because she wants to keep Obamacare and she wants to make it even worse, and it can’t get any worse. Bad health care at the most expensive price. We have to repeal and replace Obamacare.

WALLACE: And, Secretary Clinton, same question, because at this point, Social Security and Medicare are going to run out, the trust funds are going to run out of money. Will you as president entertain — will you consider a grand bargain, a deal that includes both tax increases and benefit cuts to try to save both programs?

CLINTON: Well, Chris, I am on record as saying that we need to put more money into the Social Security Trust Fund. That’s part of my commitment to raise taxes on the wealthy. My Social Security payroll contribution will go up, as will Donald’s, assuming he can’t figure out how to get out of it. But what we want to do is to replenish the Social Security Trust Fund…

TRUMP: Such a nasty woman.

CLINTON: … by making sure that we have sufficient resources, and that will come from either raising the cap and/or finding other ways to get more money into it. I will not cut benefits. I want to enhance benefits for low-income workers and for women who have been disadvantaged by the current Social Security system.

But what Donald is proposing with these massive tax cuts will result in a $20 trillion additional national debt. That will have dire consequences for Social Security and Medicare.

And I’ll say something about the Affordable Care Act, which he wants to repeal. The Affordable Care Act extended the solvency of the Medicare Trust Fund. So if repeals it, our Medicare problem gets worse. What we need to do is go after…

TRUMP: Your husband disagrees with you. He said Obamacare was the craziest thing he’s ever seen.

CLINTON: … the long-term health care drivers. We’ve got to get costs down, increase value, emphasize wellness. I have a plan for doing that. And I think that we will be able to get entitlement spending under control by with more resources and harder decisions.

WALLACE: This is — this is the final time, probably to both of your delight, that you’re going to be on a stage together in this campaign. I would like to end it on a positive note. You had not agreed to closing statements, but it seems to me in a funny way that might make it more interesting because you haven’t prepared closing statements.

So I’d like you each to take — and we’re going to put a clock up, a minute, as the final question in the final debate, to tell the American people why they should elect you to be the next president. This is another new mini-segment. Secretary Clinton, it’s your turn to go first.

CLINTON: Well, I would like to say to everyone watching tonight that I’m reaching out to all Americans — Democrats, Republicans, and independents — because we need everybody to help make our country what it should be, to grow the economy, to make it fairer, to make it work for everyone. We need your talents, your skills, your commitments, your energy, your ambition.

You know, I’ve been privileged to see the presidency up close. And I know the awesome responsibility of protecting our country and the incredible opportunity of working to try to make life better for all of you. I have made the cause of children and families really my life’s work.

That’s what my mission will be in the presidency. I will stand up for families against powerful interests, against corporations. I will do everything that I can to make sure that you have good jobs, with rising incomes, that your kids have good educations from preschool through college. I hope you will give me a chance to serve as your president.

WALLACE: Secretary Clinton, thank you.

Mr. Trump?

TRUMP: She’s raising the money from the people she wants to control. Doesn’t work that way.

But when I started this campaign, I started it very strongly. It’s called “Make America Great Again.” We’re going to make America great. We have a depleted military. It has to be helped, has to be fixed. We have the greatest people on Earth in our military. We don’t take care of our veterans. We take care of illegal immigrants, people that come into the country illegally, better than we take care of our vets. That can’t happen.

Our policemen and women are disrespected. We need law and order, but we need justice, too. Our inner cities are a disaster. You get shot walking to the store. They have no education. They have no jobs. I will do more for African-Americans and Latinos than she can ever do in 10 lifetimes.

All she’s done is talk to the African-Americans and to the Latinos, but they get the vote, and then they come back, they say, we’ll see you in four years. We are going to make America strong again, and we are going to make America great again, and it has to start now. We cannot take four more years of Barack Obama, and that’s what you get when you get her.

WALLACE: Thank you both.

(APPLAUSE)

Secretary Clinton — hold on just a moment, folks. Secretary Clinton, Mr. Trump, I want to thank you both for participating in all three of these debates.

That brings to an end this year’s debates sponsored by the Commission on Presidential Debates. We want to thank the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and its students for having us. Now the decision is up to you.

While millions have already voted, Election Day, November 8th, is just 20 days away. One thing everyone here can agree on: We hope you will go vote. It is one of the honors and obligations of living in this great country. Thank you, and good night.

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