Advertisement As Clinton crams for debate, Warren stumps in New Hampshire Warren: Trump, GOP 'want to make hate OK' Share Shares Copy Link Copy

As Hillary Clinton prepares for Monday's first presidential debate against Donald Trump, one of her most famous surrogates, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, took to the campaign trail.The Massachusetts Democrat made stops in Nashua, Manchester and Durham on behalf of her party's nominee for president.Warren also campaigned alongside Gov. Maggie Hassan, who is challenging Republican Sen. Kelly Ayotte, and Carol Shea-Porter, who is trying to retake her seat in Congress from Republican Rep. Frank Guinta."I'm here for Carol. I'm here for Maggie and I'm here for Hillary! How about you?" Warren told a cheering crowd of several hundred supporters in Manchester.She leveled a new charge against Trump and Republicans."They want to make hate OK in America," she said.Following her speech in Manchester, Warren told WCVB she has some advice for Clinton about the debate."Yeah, go be Hillary Clinton. If people see the real Hillary Clinton and the real Donald Trump, no doubt we're going to win this election for Hillary," she said.In a statement, Trump senior adviser Mike Biundo said, "Elizabeth Warren must feel terrible having to shill for Hillary Clinton in New Hampshire just a couple of week after Hillary let slip to fat cat donors at a Wall Street fundraiser that she views half of American voters -- including millions of veterans, firefighters and hard-working moms -- as either 'deplorable' or 'irredeemable.'"Clinton, whose "basket of deplorables" comment referred to Trump supporters and not American voters, has since expressed regret for the statement."I'm excited to get Hillary Clinton elected on the most progressive agenda that anyone has run on in America," Warren told WCVB.Following Warren's remarks, volunteers signed up to begin campaigning door-to-door in New Hampshire over the next six weeks.One of the volunteers, Ryan Richman, said he was prepared if voters tell him they plan not to vote for either presidential candidate."I will use Bernie Sanders' words: This is not the election to sit out," he said.As Richman walked down a residential street in Manchester, he worked off a list of targeted voters.At one home, he met but failed to convince Dan Bartlett, a Trump supporter, to change his mind about Clinton."I think she has real problems with the truth. You look at all the scandals that have surrounded her and her husband for decades," Bartlett said.The Clinton campaign announced the candidate plans to return to New Hampshire on Wednesday but did not release details about the appearance.