EAU CLAIRE, WIS. – Donald Trump rallied several thousand supporters in Wisconsin on Tuesday night, continuing his recent push into states that long have been viewed as solidly Democratic in presidential politics.
"In just one week, we are going to win the great state of Wisconsin and we are going to win back the White House," Trump said in his dinner-hour rally inside the W.L. Zorn Arena at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire. "It's gonna happen, folks."
While Wisconsin hasn't backed a Republican for president since 1984, it finds itself part of a high-stakes, last-minute campaign detour.
The Republican nominee has surfaced recently in New Mexico, Colorado, Michigan and Wisconsin in hopes of capitalizing on a recent fall in Hillary Clinton's poll numbers. In highlighting so-called blue states, he hopes to seize on the new FBI investigation related to Clinton's e-mail use to pull off some upsets and escape the otherwise narrow path he has to the White House.
On Tuesday, Trump's campaign announced a new, $25 million advertising investment in 12 states, including Wisconsin, that have mostly leaned toward Clinton. Clinton has responded with a renewed effort to hold on to states seen as part of her electoral base. Her running mate, Sen. Tim Kaine, campaigned in Appleton and Madison on Tuesday, and Chelsea Clinton was scheduled to be in the state Wednesday and Thursday.
Kaine at his Madison stop called Wisconsin "important politically" and promised the state would see more big-name Democrats in coming days.
Clinton has not campaigned here herself since clinching her party's nomination, but she now plans to visit Michigan on Friday. And a Clinton-affiliated PAC is spending millions of dollars on late ad buys in Michigan and Colorado.
It's still unclear to what extent this detour from the toss-up states reflects genuine opportunity for Trump — who has not yet locked down all the traditionally Republican states — to expand his national map. In Wisconsin, Clinton led Trump in the most recent poll, winning 48 percent to his 42 percent in surveys done last Thursday and Friday by Emerson College. A new Marquette University poll of the state is due to be released Wednesday.