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The final Clinton-Trump debate: Four key moments

LAS VEGAS — The third and final debate of the caustic 2016 US presidential election started with a sober tone... but ended up with Mr Donald Trump questioning the fundamental underpinnings of the nation. Here are four key moments:

Republican U.S. presidential nominee Donald Trump and Democratic U.S. presidential nominee Hillary Clinton finish their third and final 2016 presidential campaign debate at UNLV in Las Vegas, Nevada. Photo: Reuters

Republican U.S. presidential nominee Donald Trump and Democratic U.S. presidential nominee Hillary Clinton finish their third and final 2016 presidential campaign debate at UNLV in Las Vegas, Nevada. Photo: Reuters

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LAS VEGAS — The third and final debate of the caustic 2016 US presidential election started with a sober tone... but ended up with Mr Donald Trump questioning the fundamental underpinnings of the nation.

Here are four key moments:

NOVEMBER 9

If Americans entered the debate concerned about what happens the day after this brutally fought election, Mr Trump did little to assuage their fears.

An hour into the 90-minute battle, the Republican nominee was asked whether he would respect the election result and concede if he lost. His answer will go into the history books.

“I’ll look at it at the time. What I’ve seen is so bad,” he said, repeating unfounded allegations of vote rigging.

Fellow Republicans rushed to denounce him, and his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton declared herself “appalled” by what she said was an attack on 240 years of US democracy.

PUPPETRY

Asked about embarrassing leaked emails, Mrs Clinton pivoted to Mr Trump’s much scrutinised relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin and the Republican’s refusal to pin the leaks on Moscow.

Mrs Clinton suggested Mr Putin wanted a “puppet” in the White House, which prompted a remarkable exchange.

“No puppet. No puppet,” said Mr Trump, talking over Mrs Clinton. “You’re the puppet!”

“No, you’re the puppet,” he continued.

Composing himself, Mr Trump said “I never met Putin. This is not my best friend. But if the United States got along with Russia, it wouldn’t be so bad.”

‘BAD HOMBRES’

Both Mrs Clinton and Mr Trump threw plenty of meat to their core political bases — ticking boxes on guns, abortion and taxes.

Mr Trump was again on the defensive over his policy of forcibly deporting millions of illegal migrants.

“We have some bad hombres here, and we’re going to get them out,” he said.

Mrs Clinton described that as an idea “that would rip our country apart.”

NASTY WOMAN

Some of the sharpest exchanges came when Mr Trump accused Mrs Clinton and her campaign team of drumming up allegations that he has groped several women.

“I believe,” Mr Trump said, “she got these people to step forward,” accusing Mrs Clinton of running a “very sleazy campaign” and adding of the claims aired by several women dating back decades: “It was all fiction.”

Mr Trump boasted, “I didn’t even apologise to my wife,” saying he did nothing wrong and so had nothing to apologise for.

Later, when the topic turned to taxes, Mrs Clinton suggested that Mr Trump might try to wriggle his way out of paying.

“Such a nasty woman,” Mr Trump said, leaning into the microphone. AFP

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