Hillary Clinton will likely point out Donald Trump's connections to racists and white supremacists, while name-dropping a sinister-sounding political ideology as well, as she takes the stage for the first time all week tomorrow.

Clinton will appear at the Truckee Meadows Community College in Reno, Nevada – a swing state – and talk about Trump's embrace of the 'alt-right,' her campaign said.

The 'alt-right' is a rather new term and its definition is still nebulous, but conservatives who prescribe to it say they are trying to preserve 'white identity' and 'Western values' as liberals push multiculturalism and 'political correctness.'

'This "alt-right" brand is embracing extremism and presenting a divisive and dystopian view of America which should concern all Americans, regardless of part,' the Clinton campaign argued.

Trump's people, on the other hand, said their candidate has never even uttered the words 'alt-right.'

'Mr. Trump has never used or condoned that term and continues to disavow any groups or individuals associated with a message of hate,' said campaign spokeswoman Hope Hicks in a statement.

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Hillary Clinton will head to Reno, Nevada tomorrow to give a speech connecting Donald Trump and his advisers to the 'alt-right' an anti-immigrant, pro-white strain of conservatism

'Alt-right' leaders have cheered the rise of Republican Donald Trump, who kicked off his campaign speaking negatively about illegal immigrants coming in from Mexico

While Trump's campaign reorganization last week may have put the GOP nominee on more solid footing, it opened him up to this type of criticism because Breitbart News Network, where new Trump campaign CEO Stephen Bannon was borrowed from, has been linked to this new strain of conservatism.

Hillary Clinton is able to make the argument more aptly because of Trump's hiring of Breitbart's Stephen Bannon (pictured). Breitbart is credited with taking the 'alt-right' movement more mainstream

The Clinton campaign pointed to an assessment made by the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks hate groups within the United States.

An April 2016 piece on SPLC's website is headlined, 'Is Breitbart.com becoming the media arm of the "alt-right?"' and charts Breitbart's move from a conservative news site to one more willing to embrace white nationalists like Richard Spencer and Jared Taylor, who founded the 'alt-right,' and carry out much of their business online.

Breitbart writers Allum Bokhari and Milo Yiannopoulos referred to Spencer and Taylor as 'intellectuals' and sugar-coated their racist posts.

Bannon was in charge of Breitbart when this piece came out.

The 'alt-right' moniker, the Washington Post explained, was birthed from a speech given by Paul Gottfried, a conservative writer, who argued that an 'alternative right' should spring up and combat the 'neoconservative-controlled conservative establishment,' which held the reins of the Republican Party during President George W. Bush's tenure.

Donald Trump's candidacy has helped the 'alt-right' movement gain mainstream attention with leader Richard Spencer tweeting, 'we've made it,' upon hearing of Hillary Clinton's speech

Gottfried was responding to the Republicans' big loss in 2008 to now-President Barack Obama.

Soon though, Spencer grabbed the name, founding an Alternative Right website in 2010, which found its audience in those against mass immigration and multiculturalism.

The other person who the Southern Poverty Law Center referred to, Taylor, edits the white nationalist magazine American Renaissance from his Fairfax County, Virginia home.

Both have been enthusiastic about Trump's run for the White House.

Meanwhile his candidacy has helped move their movement into the mainstream of Republican politics.

On day No. 1 of Trump's campaign, his calling for a border fence, and calling Mexican immigrants 'rapists,' was the political music they were interested in hearing.

And Trump's triumph over pro-immigration reform Republicans, like Sen. Marco Rubio – who once was part of the Senate's Gang of Eight before stepping away from the reform package –was further proof that the ideology was gaining ground, they believed.

Taylor has argued that Trump should 'concentrate on his natural constituency, which is white people.'

He argued that by winning 65 percent of the white vote, Trump would override the Democrats' dominance with minority communities.

Upon hearing that Clinton planned to brand Trump as being a member of the 'alt-right' movement, Spencer simply tweeted: 'We've made it.'

But always the curve-call candidate, with Bannon on board, Trump has indeed changed his campaign message.