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Wikileaks releases more than 2,000 emails from Hillary Clinton’s campaign chair before 2nd presidential debate

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton pauses as she speaks at a rally at the Downtown Toledo Train Station in Toledo, Ohio, Monday, Oct. 3, 2016. AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

WASHINGTON – Donald Trump’s sex-talk and Hillary Clinton’s purported backroom talk — old comments, coming to light now, have set the stage for a combustible debate Sunday.

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The ones belonging to Trump are indisputably more eye-popping, but Clinton wasn’t removed from the spotlight.

READ MORE: Donald Trump’s allies condemn vulgar comments from leaked video

A batch of emails from Clinton’s campaign chair appeared Friday on the site Wikileaks. The more than 2,000 emails said to be from John Podesta featured prominent play from the Kremlin-backed news agency, Russia Today, which tweeted several times about the emails while ignoring the news about Trump.

One of the emails includes details about a source of intrigue this year: the speeches Clinton delivered to banks. Her former opponent Bernie Sanders hounded her during the primaries to release the transcripts of the speeches, delivered in 2013 and 2014.

The latest hacked emails include a summary of those speeches.

They show a candidate who speaks one way in public and another in private, when it comes to key policies. In fact, Clinton is described telling one group, the National Multi-Housing Council, that it’s important to emphasize different ideas in public and in private.

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She describes the movie, “Lincoln,” about the Civil War-era president privately pushing for the end of slavery more aggressively than it was publicly known. Clinton is described saying: “So, you need both a public and a private position.”

Podesta posted a series of tweets Friday night, calling the disclosures a Russian hack and raising questions about whether some of the documents could have been altered.

“I’m not happy about being hacked by the Russians in their quest to throw the election to Donald Trump,” Podesta wrote. “Don’t have time to figure out which docs are real and which are faked.”

One quote Trump could throw back at her involves trade.

In 2013, she is quoted in the emails telling a Brazilian bank, Itau: “My dream is a hemispheric common market, with open trade and open borders, some time in the future with energy that is as green and sustainable as we can get it, powering growth and opportunity for every person in the hemisphere.”

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It’s a view she’d be loath to repeat nowadays on the stump. In the current race, there are tight races in states where globalized trade has hurt key industries, like Ohio and Pennsylvania.

Clinton has spent the campaign expressing skepticism about deals like NAFTA and the Trans-Pacific Partnership, much to the annoyance of trade-liberalizers and to the skepticism of some progressives who view it as a campaign-time charade.

Now she’s facing an opponent proposing restrictions on trade and a wall at the border. Trump even repeated an implausible conspiracy theory on the subject Friday, suggesting migrants were being let in through the Mexican border to vote in the election.

It’s a safe bet Clinton won’t be discussing a hemispheric common market in Sunday’s debate, the second of the campaign. Polls show the vast majority of Americans believe she won the first debate, and her lead in surveys has grown.

It’s likelier she will refer to Trump’s comments about women.

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READ MORE: Donald Trump says he ‘can do anything’ to women in leaked 2005 video

In the never-before-aired recording, he tells an interviewer at Access Hollywood things like: “I did try and f— her. She was married.” He says he, “moved on her like bitch” and then made a crass remark about the woman’s breast implants

He asks for breath mints in case he reflexively kisses an actress he expects to see on the set. “You know I’m automatically attracted to beautiful — I just start kissing them. It’s like a magnet. Just kiss. I don’t even wait,” Trump says.

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“And when you’re a star they let you do it. You can do anything.”

He added: “Grab them by the p—-. You can do anything.”

Trump cancelled a planned appearance in Wisconsin, after local congressman and party leader Paul Ryan said he was sickened by what he heard.

A poll this week already shows Trump losing among women by 22 percentage points. In New Hampshire, where she’s involved in a close race, Republican senator Kelly Ayotte says Donald Trump’s lewd comments about women were “totally inappropriate and offensive.”

With files from The Associated Press

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