Eliza Collins

USA TODAY

Eric Trump wishes everyone would just “take the high road” but he expects a general election between his father and Hillary Clinton to get nasty. The reason: He thinks the Clintons will “take the low road” when campaigning.

Trump’s son appeared on Fox News’ America’s Newsroom Wednesday and discussed how the campaign expected to attack Clinton in the general.

“Everything is going to be fair game. There’s just no question. At this point, anything is going to be fair game. They are going to throw everything at us and we’re probably going to have to do the same thing right back. It’d be really nice if everyone said let’s take the high road, let’s talk about what people actually want to get accomplished, but that’s just not the way the Clintons fight.”

His comments echo those of his father’s long-time adviser Roger Stone, who has been criticizing the Clintons since long before Trump ran for president. Stone, who was a campaign operative for President Richard Nixon, is also the author of The Clintons’ War on Women.

Stone is no longer part of the Trump campaign, but the presumed Republican nominee has already echoed many of Stone's attacks on the Clintons. Trump has brought up Bill Clinton’s indiscretions (some proved, some just reported) throughout the campaign.

And his son had no problem bringing them up on Fox. When asked about the campaign’s plan was to defend Trump’s comments about women, he brought up former President Bill Clinton's affair with Monica Lewinsky.

“You look at her husband, you look at Bill, the man was impeached while in the Oval Office for having an affair with an intern, with a 24-year-old intern. I really don’t want to hear it from Hillary, no one does,” he said. “They’ll take sound bites from my father when he was with Howard Stern 20 years ago, they’re going back and forth, they’re having fun. She’s got a terrible, terrible record on women and so does Bill, who now all of a sudden she wants to bring on the campaign, so I just find it very ironic.”

Stone's former business partner Paul Manafort (the two co-founded a lobbying firm) is now a senior adviser of Trump.

The Clinton campaign did not immediately respond to request for comment.