Hillary Clinton launched a tirade on Donald Trump supporters when she was heckled at a Florida rally by a protester who called her husband a 'rapist'.

The protester shouted that her husband 'Bill Clinton is a rapist' as he waved a neon green sign which bore the same words at a rally at the Reverend Samuel Delevoe Memorial Park in Fort Lauderdale on Tuesday.

Clinton raised her voice and pointed a finger at the protester as she exclaimed: 'I am sick and tired of the negative, dark, divisive, dangerous vision and the anger of people who support Donald Trump.'

She continued: 'It is time for us to say no, we are not going backwards, we're going forward into a brighter future.'

Her voice became hoarse as she delivered the address.

Supporters chanted her name to drown out the heckler who was ejected from the rally.

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Lauderdale on Tuesday. Clinton raised her voice and pointed a finger at the protester as she exclaimed: 'I am sick and tired of the negative, dark, divisive, dangerous vision and the anger of people who support Donald Trump'

Clinton's voice became hoarse as she delivered the address and the crowd drowned out the heckler with chants of 'Hillary'

Clinton gestures as she speaks during her presidential campaign event at the Reverend Samuel Delevoe Memorial Park in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, today

Clinton spoke to the racially mixed crowd after being introduced by civil rights legend representative John Lewis.

It was her third event of the day. Throughout the rallies on Tuesday she had launched withering attacks on Trump and also ridiculed his 'conspiracy theories', questioned the size of his wallet, and accused him of assaulting women in an effort to keep the full focus of the final days of the campaign on her rival.

At his own rallies Tuesday, Trump stuck to the script and avoided taking the bait.

Clinton pointed into the crowd as she raised her voice following the heckler's chant

Clinton slammed Trump as 'somebody who claims he's worth $10billion - he ought to pay some federal income taxes'.

At Fort Lauderdale she referenced an earlier event in the day with former Miss Universe Alicia Machado.

'If you're Miss Universe, you look pretty good, right? But Donald Trump called her Miss Piggy, insulted her heritage, called her miss housekeeping because she's a Latina,' Clinton continued.

'I was proud of her. She doesn't let such a small person get her down,' Clinton said, one of several times she called Trump 'small.'

'Don't buy into that dark, pessimistic vision,' Clinton told the Broward County crowd.

Clinton ripped a report from the headlines about Donald Trump avoiding millions in taxes to ramp up her attacks on her GOP presidential rival who 'stiffs you, who cheats you, and who walks away with money'.

Clinton got introduced onto the stage by civil rights legend representative John Lewis, pictured today, and she talked up a recent visit to a soul food restaurant

Clinton ripped a report from the headlines about Donald Trump avoiding millions in taxes to ramp up her attacks on her GOP presidential rival who 'stiffs you, who cheats you, and who walks away with money'

It was clear from her day Tuesday that the candidate was determined not to leave behind any useful attack in a tightening presidential race – in a state where it would be exceedingly hard for Trump to prevail nationwide without a win

Campaigning earlier in the day in Sanford Florida, Clinton referenced a new New York Times report that Trump avoided paying millions of taxes using a questionable tax avoidance scheme that his own lawyers advised against.

'He took everything our great country offer and scooped it up with both hands,' Clinton told a lively crowd.

'And then he has the nerve to call our military a disaster, to insult POWs, when he hasn't paid a penny to support the people who put on the uniform of the United States of America,' Clinton said.

'And I think the American people deserve to know whether he paid any penalty for skirting the law, and how much he's actually worth, and who he does business with.' She added: 'I'm particularly interested in the Russian business deals that he has.

She called on Trump to 'immediately release his tax returns' as other presidential nominees have done for decades.

'I believe that most of us here have paid a lot more federal income taxes than Donald Trump has,' Clinton said, 'and he claims he's worth $10billion.' The Times, in its report, called the scheme 'legally dubious.'

Clinton campaigned with former Miss Universe Alicia Machado in Dade City, Florida

Clinton had brought up Machado in the first presidential debate, prompting Donald Trump to attack the Venezuelan beauty queen. Clinton and Machado are seen on stage in Florida today

Clinton was almost defensive at the top of remarks as she set up her hits on her rival. But she said it was important to set a 'contrast' because, 'We've never had someone so unqualified or so unfit' to be president'.

But it was clear from her day Tuesday that the candidate was determined not to leave behind any useful attack in a tightening presidential race – in a state where it would be exceedingly hard for Trump to prevail nationwide without a win.

Earlier Tuesday, when Clinton appeared with Machado, where she blasted Trump as a 'bully' for his comments toward the beauty queen who says he called her 'Miss Piggy.'

'He sure has spent a lot of time demeaning, degrading, insulting and assaulting women,' Clinton told a crowd at the Dade City where she tore apart Trump for his treatment of women and girls.

She piled on in Sanford: 'He insulted her heritage because she was a Latina and called her 'Miss Housekeeping,' Clinton said. 'But as Alicia said today she refused to let such a small person get her down.'

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump is seen above speaking at a campaign stop at UW-Eau Claire's Zorn Arena in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, on Tuesday

Clinton mocked some of the pre-debate spin about Trump trying to 'get into my head' – a possible reference to Trump's decisions to bring Clinton accusers like Paula Jones and Juanita Brodderick to the debates.

'He's going to get into my head, he's going to really mess me,' Clinton said, saying she was 'sitting there thinking, 'No he's not.'

Clinton did allow that, 'It doesn't mean I enjoy listening to some of the things he had to say.'

Donald Trump avoided paying taxes in the early 1990s through a tax avoidance maneuver so questionable, his lawyers warned him the IRS might come after him should he be audited, according to new documents.

The maneuver was so dubious, according to the New York Times, it was later made illegal by Congress.

Trump potentially avoided paying tens of millions of dollars in federal personal income tax due to the avoidance maneuver, which was a new twist on 'stock-for-debt swap', discovered by the Times.