With all proper respect to Bob Woodward for past deeds of actual reporting, he has become the Master of False Equivalency. Whenever one political party does something majorly wrong, leave it to Woodward to find some tiny case of the opposition party doing something vaguely similar so he can say "Both sides do it." Sometimes, that's true but often, it is not. It's not equivalent to Trump coarsening the political arguments in the U.S. when Woodward argues that Democrats should not attack Trump's kids, as if they're pre-teens trying to stay out of the spotlight. They're adults running their father's campaign, speaking everywhere they can on his behalf and lying their wealthy butts off about Hillary. They deserve no "zone of protection" as he calls it.
Washington Post fact checker Glenn Kessler looks at the story Sean Hannity is spreading now about a heroic deed he says Donald Trump did once, sending his planes to bring some stranded Marines home. You may be shocked to find out that the story is not true. And it sure doesn't sound like Mr. Hannity did anything to verify it before presenting it as fact.
Trump's selling point of the day seems to be that Obama is the "founder of ISIS" and Hillary is its co-founder. Politifact notes some of the reasons that is not true. (And if Trump is going to claim that voting for the Iraq War as a Senator is how Ms. Clinton co-founded ISIS…well, so did his running mate and an awful lot of candidates he's supporting.)
Six major pollsters — including Marist, Quinnipiac and Susquehanna — give Hillary a lead in Pennsylvania of 8-13 points. I am of the opinion that it will be real, real difficult for Donald Trump to win the presidency if he can't win Pennsylvania. It's theoretically possible if he wins both Ohio and Florida but he's running behind in both of those states, too.