On Monday's GMA, ABC's George Stephanopoulos hounded Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway on James Conway announcing that the FBI would not change its findings on the Hillary Clinton e-mail scandal. The Clinton Foundation donor wondered, "Do you accept [Comey's] finding now?" Stephanopoulos also played up that Comey "said that no reasonable prosecutor would bring the case, and the investigation is closed now." By contrast, just minutes earlier, the anchor tossed softballs at Clinton's campaign manager, Robby Mook: "You've also seen a real surge in the Latino vote in Florida; and...Nevada. Have they delivered those states to Hillary?" [video below]

Stephanopoulos first asked Mook, "I know you welcomed that news from James Comey yesterday, but did it come too late?" The Clinton surrogate answered, in part, "We were glad, obviously, that this was resolved. I don't understand why he couldn't have just looked into the matter and resolved it, and — and not created such a ruckus in the campaign." The ABC journalist followed up by highlighting that there's "a real surge in the Latino vote in Florida; and also, in the State of Nevada." He asked, "Have they delivered those states to Hillary Clinton?"

The anchor kept up the kid glove treatment for the remainder of the interview:

GEORGE STEPHANOUPOULOS: Donald Trump is really taking aim at your blue firewall — those states of Pennsylvania, Minnesota, and Michigan — any of those states in danger? ROBBY MOOK, CAMPAIGN MANAGER, HILLARY CLINTON FOR AMERICA: Well, George, I think he needed to get those into play much earlier. I'm not concerned that he's spending so much time there at the end, because he didn't build a ground game....We have an apparatus in place to turn out our vote; and I don't think Donald Trump dashing around to these states at the last hour is going to do what's needed to get his supporters out. STEPHANOUPOULOS: Final question: what was the key moment in this campaign for you? MOOK: You know, the convention and those debates were the — the big opportunity for Hillary to speak directly to the voters in an unfiltered way. Every time she had the opportunity to do that — to make her case — and particularly, when voters got the see her up against Donald Trump, she did best....

Stephanopoulos led his interview of Conway with his "do you accept his finding now...and do you admit not that Mr. Trump was wrong" question. Conway replied by underlining that she was "just so dismayed that the Democrats attacked Jim Comey so viciously a week ago. And now, he's a hero again." The ABC journalist interrupted his guest mid-answer and pointed out, "But you all were attacking him before that."

The Trump campaign manager continued by summarizing Director Comey's July 2016 congressional testimony on the Clinton investigation: "She should not have set up...this illegal private e-mail server. She lied about the number of devices she had. She said one. Jim Comey, under oath, said multiple — turns out, about thirteen. She lied about having classified information. And I just think that's why her honesty and trustworthy numbers have never really budged." Stephanopoulos again interrupted and asked, "But he also said that no reasonable prosecutor would bring the case, and the investigation is closed now. Do you accept that?"

Later in the segment, the anchor asked for Conway's reaction to Mook's boasts about the early vote in Florida. He also played up that Trump has to "find a way to pick off one of those blue states that has gone to Democrats traditionally — and you're going to Minnesota; you're going to Michigan; you're going to Pennsylvania. All the public polls there show that Donald Trump has never been in the lead." Stephanopoulos ended the interview with a softer question: "And if Donald Trump wins tomorrow night, what is going to be the moment that put him over the top?"

The full transcripts of George Stephanopoulos's interviews of Robby Mook and Kellyanne Conway on the November 7, 2016 edition of ABC's Good Morning America: