Hillary Clinton revealed a formula she hopes will help beat presidential rival Donald Trump. (File Photo)
Washington:
Hillary Clinton this week revealed a formula she hopes will help beat presidential rival Donald Trump in November: a not-so-subtle suggestion he is unhinged.
A string of 2016 presidential hopefuls have tried to land a punch on "The Donald" with little effect.
Trump has brushed off earnest-sounding accusations that he is not presidential, largely because many Americans seem to be clamoring for an unconventional leader.
Democratic strategists privately admit that casting Trump as a "loose cannon" similarly misfired -- that tack, they say, only played to the Republican's tough man brand.
So in San Diego on Thursday Clinton tried a new formula.
Trump, she argued, is not just unpresidential and unpredictable, he's too unhinged to be in power, or as she put it -- "temperamentally unfit" to be commander-in-chief.
"This is not someone who should ever have the nuclear codes -- because it's not hard to imagine Donald Trump leading us into a war just because somebody got under his very thin skin."
She even suggested psychiatrists explain his "affection for tyrants."
You could call this Clinton's "Daisy strategy."
Echoes of '64'
In 1964, incumbent president Lyndon B. Johnson faced a challenge from a tough-talking Republican nominee.
Barry Goldwater was a US Senator and friend to Democrat John F. Kennedy, but he was also from the right fringe of the political mainstream.
Goldwater was endorsed by the white supremacist Ku Klux Klan, campaigned on a platform of withdrawing from the United Nations, and advocated the use of tactical nuclear weapons against north Vietnam.
His nuclear position prompted Johnson's campaign to build and unleash "Daisy."
A minute long, and only broadcast by Johnson's campaign once, the attack ad would become one of the most famous in US political lore.
It starts with an angelic young girl counting as she picks petals of a flower.
Then, suddenly, an ominous sounding voice from mission control begins a countdown to zero -- which brings a boom, blinding light and a mushroom cloud that would be unmistakable to voters so soon after the Cuban missile crisis.
"These are the stakes" says Johnson, playing narrator. "To make a world in which all of God's children can live, or to go into the dark. We must either love each other. Or we must die."
A caption fills the screen: "Vote for President Johnson on Nov. 3. The stakes are too high for you to stay home."
The message was unmistakable: Vote for crazy Barry Goldwater and the little girl gets it.
Johnson was criticized for the ad, but he nevertheless won by a landslide.
This line of attack, particularly when linked to security, is one that Trump may find difficult to parry.
Trump's response so far has been to suggest Clinton should go to jail over an email scandal and asserting he has a "good temperament."
"I don't have thin skin," Trump told CNN. "I have very strong and thick skin."
Some believe that won't wash.
"He has obviously shown himself to be a non-traditional candidate, but this is an area where ad hominem attacks aren't going to work," said Geoffrey Skelley of the University of Virginia Center for Politics.
Trump's personal attacks on Clinton "may work with his base, but they will hurt him in the long run," Skelley said.
"He can't just resort to that. You need to put on a real presidential posture."
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
A string of 2016 presidential hopefuls have tried to land a punch on "The Donald" with little effect.
Trump has brushed off earnest-sounding accusations that he is not presidential, largely because many Americans seem to be clamoring for an unconventional leader.
Democratic strategists privately admit that casting Trump as a "loose cannon" similarly misfired -- that tack, they say, only played to the Republican's tough man brand.
So in San Diego on Thursday Clinton tried a new formula.
Trump, she argued, is not just unpresidential and unpredictable, he's too unhinged to be in power, or as she put it -- "temperamentally unfit" to be commander-in-chief.
"This is not someone who should ever have the nuclear codes -- because it's not hard to imagine Donald Trump leading us into a war just because somebody got under his very thin skin."
She even suggested psychiatrists explain his "affection for tyrants."
You could call this Clinton's "Daisy strategy."
Echoes of '64'
In 1964, incumbent president Lyndon B. Johnson faced a challenge from a tough-talking Republican nominee.
Barry Goldwater was a US Senator and friend to Democrat John F. Kennedy, but he was also from the right fringe of the political mainstream.
Goldwater was endorsed by the white supremacist Ku Klux Klan, campaigned on a platform of withdrawing from the United Nations, and advocated the use of tactical nuclear weapons against north Vietnam.
His nuclear position prompted Johnson's campaign to build and unleash "Daisy."
A minute long, and only broadcast by Johnson's campaign once, the attack ad would become one of the most famous in US political lore.
It starts with an angelic young girl counting as she picks petals of a flower.
Then, suddenly, an ominous sounding voice from mission control begins a countdown to zero -- which brings a boom, blinding light and a mushroom cloud that would be unmistakable to voters so soon after the Cuban missile crisis.
"These are the stakes" says Johnson, playing narrator. "To make a world in which all of God's children can live, or to go into the dark. We must either love each other. Or we must die."
A caption fills the screen: "Vote for President Johnson on Nov. 3. The stakes are too high for you to stay home."
The message was unmistakable: Vote for crazy Barry Goldwater and the little girl gets it.
Johnson was criticized for the ad, but he nevertheless won by a landslide.
This line of attack, particularly when linked to security, is one that Trump may find difficult to parry.
Trump's response so far has been to suggest Clinton should go to jail over an email scandal and asserting he has a "good temperament."
"I don't have thin skin," Trump told CNN. "I have very strong and thick skin."
Some believe that won't wash.
"He has obviously shown himself to be a non-traditional candidate, but this is an area where ad hominem attacks aren't going to work," said Geoffrey Skelley of the University of Virginia Center for Politics.
Trump's personal attacks on Clinton "may work with his base, but they will hurt him in the long run," Skelley said.
"He can't just resort to that. You need to put on a real presidential posture."
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world