When Donald Trump raised the issue of her husband’s treatment of women, she tried to change the subject.
When Trump accused her of harboring “tremendous hate in her heart,” she sat back on her stool, hands folded in her lap, a smile flickering across her face.
Even when Trump said he’d appoint a prosecutor to investigate her, perhaps to send her to prison, she did not directly respond.
Hillary Clinton dodged Trump’s most pointed barbs throughout their second debate Sunday, a strategy designed both to avoid prolonging any discussion of issues that might be bad for her – such as the attacks in Benghazi, Libya, on her watch – while also hoping that Trump would talk himself into trouble, particularly on issues such as women.
“She was really focused on trying to talk to the voters in the room and across the country,” said Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., a Clinton supporter. “She wasn’t going to follow him down every rabbit hole.”
Attempting to stay above the fray was clearly a calculated move, said University of Michigan debate coach Aaron Kall.
“You don’t want to get into a race to the bottom with Trump,” Kall said. “Trump’s specialty is being a counterpuncher.”
He noted, too, that with Trump bleeding support from his own party and his numbers sagging, Clinton didn’t “have to take as many risks. She had the benefit of being in the lead.”
Clinton had signaled this approach a few days earlier, when a 2005 audiotape surfaced of the Republican presidential nominee bragging about groping women. Clinton and her surrogates said little about the tape, content to let Trump twist and watch Republicans repudiate him, believing that his mouth may be his own worst enemy.
It’s locker room talk, and it’s one of those things. I will knock the hell out of ISIS.
Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump
In the hours before the debate Sunday, Clinton chose not to engage in a detailed response when Trump appeared in a Facebook Live with three women who’ve accused Bill Clinton of rape or unwanted sexual advances and a fourth who says Hillary Clinton demeaned her when she defended in court the man accused of raping her.
Instead, Clinton tweeted a video of Michelle Obama at the Democratic National Convention pledging, “When they go low, we go high.”