COLUMBUS, Ohio _ President Barack Obama went to Ohio on Tuesday to campaign for Hillary Clinton and avoided mentioning the biggest threat confronting her candidacy: the decision by FBI Director James Comey to publicly renew a probe related to Clinton's email system.
"There's noise and there's distractions,'' Obama said at a campaign rally near Columbus. "I want you to tune all of that out."
The White House has sought to distance itself from top Democrats' attacks on Comey. Obama's press secretary, Josh Earnest, said repeatedly Monday that he would "neither defend nor criticize" Comey's decision to disclose a review of newly discovered emails that might be related to the investigation of the former secretary of state's use of a private server.
He called Comey a "man of integrity" but said his letter informing Congress of the emails "had the opposite of the intended effect." Obama does not believe Comey is trying to influence the election, Earnest said _ a charge first leveled by Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid on Sunday.
The revelation by Comey that the agency was investigating emails found on a computer belonging to Anthony Weiner, the estranged husband of close Clinton aide Huma Abedin, jolted the presidential race between Clinton and Republican Donald Trump a little more than a week before Election Day. It was disclosed in a brief letter Comey sent to lawmakers on Friday. The FBI has publicly provided no information about what the files contain or how they may relate to the earlier investigation into Clinton's use of a private email system while she was secretary of state.
Trump has reveled in the FBI's latest investigation, arguing it is reason for his supporters to go to the polls and for Clinton's supporters to abandon her.
"Hillary is the one who broke the law over and over and over again," Trump said Monday at a rally in Michigan. "She's likely to be under investigation for criminality for a very, very long time to come."
Clinton and her top allies have questioned Comey's judgment and, in some cases, his neutrality.
During a rally at Kent State University on Monday, Clinton said many are questioning "why in the world the FBI would decide to jump into an election with no evidence of wrongdoing with just days to go."
"There is no case," she said.