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Donald Trump vs. Hillary Clinton: The most memorable, cringe-worthy moments from the 2016 campaign

Click to play video: 'Donald Trump’s Greatest Hits: The 90 most shocking things he’s said during the election campaign'
Donald Trump’s Greatest Hits: The 90 most shocking things he’s said during the election campaign
WATCH ABOVE: The 90 most shocking things Donald Trump has said during the election campaign – Nov 5, 2016

WASHINGTON — Every presidential race has its big moments. This one, more than most.

A look back at some of the historic, amusing and cringe-inducing events of Campaign 2016.

Going down?

Donald Trump’s long ride down the escalator at Trump Tower to announce his presidential bid in June 2015 wasn’t huge news at the time. It only merited a mention on page 16 of his hometown newspaper, The New York Times. But his 45-minute speech laid out a road map for the next 500 days.

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READ MORE: US Election: America, on a knife’s edge

It had denunciations of rapists from Mexico, the promise to build a border wall, complaints that the United States doesn’t win anymore, assertions that the U.S. should have taken Iraq’s oil before the Islamic State group got it, rants against “stupid” trade deals and many more themes Trump has hammered on ever since.

Raise you hand

WATCH ABOVE: Trump steals spotlight in Republican Presidential candidates debate

Trump jolted the first Republican debate in August 2015 when he was the sole candidate among 10 men on the stage to raise his hand to signal he wouldn’t pledge to support the eventual GOP nominee.

The best he could offer: “I can totally make the pledge if I’m the nominee.”

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READ MORE: Will 2016 presidential election leave the U.S. a more violent place?

This was the same debate where Trump mixed it up with Fox News’ Megyn Kelly over his history of intemperate comments about women, foreshadowing a running campaign theme. Trump answered Kelly’s question about whether he was part of the “war on women” with a riff against political correctness.

Those ‘damn emails’

Click to play video: 'After days of uncertainty, FBI will not change decision regarding Hillary Clinton’s emails'
After days of uncertainty, FBI will not change decision regarding Hillary Clinton’s emails

WATCH ABOVE: FBI will not change decision regarding Hillary Clinton’s emails

Hillary Clinton got a gift from Bernie Sanders in the first Democratic debate, in October 2015, when he seconded her dismay at all the focus on her use of a private email setup as secretary of state. “The American people are sick and tired of hearing about your damn emails,” Sanders said.

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READ MORE: FBI says review of Clinton emails over, she should not face charges

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That took some air out of the controversy, but it never fully went away. In July, FBI Director James Comey announced he would not recommend charges against Clinton over the email issue, but said she and her aides had been “extremely careless” in handling classified information.

In the campaign’s closing days, Clinton’s momentum slowed after the FBI announced it was investigating whether there was classified information in newly discovered emails. Then, just two days before the election, Comey said the new batch of emails hadn’t changed the FBI’s conclusions that Clinton shouldn’t face charges. Republicans in Congress were sure to have more questions.

Small hands. Eww!

Click to play video: 'Donald Trump rejects small hands claims, calls them ‘beautiful’'
Donald Trump rejects small hands claims, calls them ‘beautiful’

WATCH ABOVE: Donald Trump rejects small hands claims, calls them ‘beautiful’

A Republican debate last March strayed into cringe-inducing territory when Trump brought up GOP rival Marco Rubio’s mocking reference to his “small hands” and then volunteered some reassurance about the size of his genitals.

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Trump told his debate audience and millions of TV viewers: “He referred to my hands, if they’re small, something else must be small. I guarantee you: There’s no problem, I guarantee.” The arbiters of good taste had a problem with that.

A ceiling shattered

Click to play video: 'Democratic nominee for president Hillary Clinton runs down what she believes in at the DNC'
Democratic nominee for president Hillary Clinton runs down what she believes in at the DNC

WATCH ABOVE: Hillary Clinton explains what she believes in at the DNC

She wore white, the colour of suffragettes. Clinton stood before voters at the Democrats’ Philadelphia convention in July and at last claimed the presidential nomination of a major party for women. “I’m so happy this day has come,” she told cheering supporters.

READ MORE: ‘We just put the biggest crack in that glass ceiling yet,’ Clinton says

“Happy for grandmothers and little girls and everyone in between. Happy for boys and men, too. Because when any barrier falls in America, for anyone, it clears the way for everyone.” Clinton had finally shattered that “glass ceiling” she cracked in the 2008 campaign.

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The ‘deplorables’

Click to play video: 'Clinton labels half of Trump supporters as ‘deplorables’'
Clinton labels half of Trump supporters as ‘deplorables’

WATCH ABOVE: Clinton labels half of Trump supporters as ‘deplorables’

Clinton drew laughter when she told supporters at a private fundraiser in September that half of Trump supporters could be lumped into a “basket of deplorables” — denouncing them as “racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamophobic, you name it.”

READ MORE: Donald Trump presidency will be ‘very difficult’ for Canada, analyst says

No one was laughing when her remarks became public. Clinton did a partial rollback, saying she’d been “grossly generalistic” and regretted saying the label fit “half” of Trump’s supporters. But she didn’t back down from the general sentiment, saying, “He has built his campaign largely on prejudice and paranoia and given a national platform to hateful views and voices.”

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A real stumble

Click to play video: 'Twitter video shows Hillary Clinton leaving 9/11 ceremony after becoming ‘overheated’'
Twitter video shows Hillary Clinton leaving 9/11 ceremony after becoming ‘overheated’

WATCH ABOVE: video shows Hillary Clinton leaving 9/11 ceremony after becoming ‘overheated’

There are always stumbles in a presidential campaign. Clinton took a real one in September when she became overheated while attending a 9/11 memorial service in New York. It turned out she was suffering from pneumonia, a condition she’d hidden from the public and most of her aides. That gave Trump an opening to press his case that Clinton lacks the “stamina” to be president.

‘You can do anything’

Click to play video: 'Donald Trump caught making vulgar comments about women in 2005 leaked tape'
Donald Trump caught making vulgar comments about women in 2005 leaked tape

WATCH: Donald Trump caught making vulgar comments about women in 2005 leaked tape

Trump’s living-large persona is part of his appeal for many people. But the leaked release in October of a 2005 video in which Trump boasted about groping women’s genitals and kissing them without permission threw his campaign into crisis. Politicians in both parties denounced Trump and some said he should drop out of the race.

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READ MORE: 7 in 10 Americans believe Donald Trump sexual assault allegations, according to new poll

Trump apologized, but wrote off his videotaped comments as mere “locker-room banter.” He denied engaging in the kind of predatory activity he’d laughed about. But a string of women came forward to say he’d made unwanted sexual advances toward them.

He went there

Click to play video: 'Presidential debate: Trump attacks Bill Clinton for alleged abuse to women'
Presidential debate: Trump attacks Bill Clinton for alleged abuse to women

WATCH ABOVE: Trump goes on the offensive against Bill Clinton 

Trump toyed throughout the campaign with bringing up allegations about Bill Clinton’s past sexual misconduct. Trump went there in a big way in October at the second presidential debate, seating three of the former president’s accusers in the front row for the faceoff. “Bill Clinton was abusive to women,” Trump said. “Hillary Clinton attacked those same women and attacked them viciously.”

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He wouldn’t go there

Click to play video: 'Trump promises to accept election results… if he wins.'
Trump promises to accept election results… if he wins.

WATCH ABOVE: Trump promises to accept election results, if he wins.

As Trump’s standing in the polls faltered, he cranked up his claims that the election was being rigged against him. Asked in the final presidential debate if he would accept the results of the election, Trump refused to go there.

READ MORE: Poll suggests Donald Trump supporters agree election is ‘rigged’; some calling for revolution

Pressed on the matter by the debate moderator, Trump said: “I will tell you at the time. I’ll keep you in suspense.” It was a startling statement that raised uncertainty about the peaceful transfer of power after the election. Even the Republican National Committee disavowed Trump’s statement.

 

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