Hillary Clinton had to edit down her campaign speech in a hurry when the sky pelted the Democratic candidate and supporters with rain during a downpour in battleground Florida Saturday.

'My friends you are a hardy bunch to stand out here in the rain,' Clinton told her supporters as the sky opened up.

'I don’t think I need to tell you all of the wrong things about Donald Trump,' she said, merely glancing over the attacks on her rival that have become a central part of her closing argument to voters.

With only seconds to go before the candidate and her backers got even more drenched, Clinton honed her pitch down to being a president for 'everybody' – eventually breaking out into a huge smile as the rain kept coming.

'But here's what I want you to remember, I want to be the president for everybody – everybody who agrees with me, people he don't agree with me,' she shouted and pointed, while the candidate and her backers got soaked.

ALL WET: Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton got drenched at her Florida rally, but took it in style

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'People who vote for me, people who don't vote for me,' she said. Then, the candidate laughed and broke out into a huge smile even as the rain came down.

She threw up her hands and yelled: 'So lets get out, lets vote for the future!'

'Lets vote for our country and what we want for our children and our grandchildren!' she continued, waving her arms in the air while her teal blazer got noticeably damp. 'God bless you she concluded – then turned to audience members behind her and raised her arms.

As she delivered her record-beating summary of her pitch, members of the crowd covered their heads with 'Stronger Together' signs, then bolted as she cut short her remarks. Some had tried to exit earlier, but security officials denied them shelter in a press tent during an early shower.

Clinton also saluted the crowd as a 'hardy group' when she took the stage during a break between showers.

But she barely got into her remarks about having 'stood up for women rights, workers rights' when the pace of rain picked up. Audience members had already had to run for cover under a tent during an earlier downpour.

Hillary Clinton did some on-the-fly editing to her stump speech after she and her supporters got pelted with rain at a Florida rally

The Floridians who turned out to hear Clinton also had to hear about the better, and drier, party they missed the night before, when Clinton held a rally in Cleveland with performances by Beyonce and Jay Z.

'Just in case you didn’t notice last night, I gotta say, I was with Jay Z,' she said at the start of her remarks, relishing the moment form the night before. 'They were amazing. You can go online and watch it. It was the most extraordinary show,' she said.

She said she particularly enjoyed how Beyonce had her backup dancers dressed in Clinton's signature pants suits.

SHORT AND SWEET: Clinton raced through the conclusion of her remarks after the rain picked up

EXIT STRATEGY: Some Clinton supporters put the candidate's 'Stronger Together' signs to good use

HIGH AND DRY: Earlier Saturday, Clinton greeted people at a stop in Miami's Little Haiti as she tries to motivate her supporters to vote

UNDER COVER: Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton cut short her campaign event in Florida Saturday after a torrential downpour

Clinton embraced the deluge, editing down her remarks and making a quick pitch for her election, barely hitting on her normal attacks on Donald Trump

AFTERMATH: Clinton reacts backstage after speaking in heavy rain at a campaign rally in Pembroke Pines, Florida

SLICK: Clinton was trying to drive up turnout in Pembroke Pines, Florida

'But what was really touching to me is both of them talked about what the election means for their daughter and for all of our daughters and our sons,' Clinton said, referencing remarks Beyonce made about the importance of the election to her daughter, Blue Ivy Carter.

Earlier Saturday, the Clinton campaign released a new positive campaign ad that features Katy Perry's hit 'Roar.'

The ad features images of ordinary Americans in all kinds of settings. Like Bernie Sanders' well-regarded campaign ad set to the theme of 'America' that jolted Clinton supporters, Clinton's ad relies on a montage of images while the empowering song provides the only audio.

Like Sanders' ad, the 'Roar' spot begins with pictures of gyrating windmills. It relies on simple close-ups of voters of all stripes, then switches to showing images of the candidate greeting adoring crowds at the end.

Only after the conclusion of the ad is Clinton's voice heard, saying she approves 'this message.'

The ad is set to air in 11 battleground states, featuring a singer who will appear with Clinton at a concert rally in Philadelphia Saturday night.

Trump released his own two-minute spot, featuring his own remarks with images of a series of his nemeses: Chinese leaders, capitalist George Soros, Hillary Clinton, the Clinton Foundation, the Federal Reserve, the UN, and other institutions Trump weaves into a web of a 'corrupt' system.

'Our movement is about replacing a failed and corrupt political establishment with a new government controlled by you, the American people,' Trump says in the ad.

'The establishment has trillions of dollars at stake in this election. For those who control the levers of power in Washington, and for the global special interests, they partner with these people that don't have your good in mind,' Trump says.

As ominous music plays in the background, Trump continues to draw his web of conspiracy. ''The political establishment that is trying to stop us is the same group responsible for our disastrous trade deals, massive illegal immigration, and economic and foreign policies that have bled out country dry,' Trump intones.

'The political establishment has brought about the destruction of our factories and our jobs, as they flee to Mexico, China and other countries all around the world,' Trump says, as the ad shows an image of a locked, closed factory.

'It's a global power structure that is responsible for the economic decisions that have robbed our working class, stripped our country of its wealth, and put that money into the pockets of a handful of large corporations and political entities.