KEENE, N.H. — Hecklers at a Chelsea Clinton get-out-the-vote event at Keene State College were met with boos and a quick comeback from the Democratic presidential nominee’s daughter that “love trumps hate.”

Calling Tuesday’s election a referendum on “the country, the world and the future that I want (my children) and their generation to grow up in,” Chelsea Clinton was barely five minutes into her speech yesterday when a man in the audience shouted, “If their grandma’s going to jail, she loses!”

“You’re ugly!” another man yelled at her, prompting the audience to boo and security guards to escort both men out.

“Goodness gracious, they can talk about whatever they want to talk about,” Chelsea Clinton said to loud applause. “My mother’s the only person who has real plans to address the challenges we face and the only person who has a real record of actually working to address the challenges in those areas. … We have to prove that ‘love trumps hate’ isn’t just a slogan.”

She told the audience of some 300 people about meeting a woman from Guatemala who came to this country 12 years ago to get her graduate degree and afterward got a job here. Today, the woman and her young son are proud American citizens, she said, but her son has been told by some of his middle school classmates, “Go back to Mexico,” and, “I can’t wait until we build a wall to keep people like you out.”

She also spoke about meeting an 8-year-old North Carolina girl who told her that she wanted her mother, Hillary, to win “because it’s time for a girl,” and because the boys in her school had told her that if Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump wins, “my dad’s going to have to go back in the closet, and there are monsters there.”

“To our children listening, that’s not rhetorical,” Chelsea Clinton said. “The Trump effect and the rise of bullying is very painfully real.”

Chelsea Clinton did not mention the newly reopened FBI investigation into her mother’s emails or the pay-to-play allegations involving the Clinton Foundation — controversies that Ellie Wilson, a 19-year-old Dartmouth College freshman from Reading, Mass., said won’t sway her vote.

“She did make a mistake, but you can’t let that one blemish ruin her 30-year career,” Wilson said. “No one is perfect.”