Transcript for New Hillary Clinton Emails Get Leaked by WikiLeaks

what she calls trump's mistreatment of women. All of this as her campaign is facing a fresh batch of hacked e-mails dropped by wikileaks and ABC's Devin Dwyer joins from our Washington bureau with more. Good morning, Devin. Reporter: Good morning, Paula. Hillary Clinton says she gets no satisfaction from the controversy surround Donald Trump but as she prepares now for the third debate, her team says she won't shy away from those accusations of sexual assault. This morning, Hillary Clinton taking Donald Trump to task over those sordid headlines prompted by as many women accusers. The whole world has heard how Donald Trump brags about mistreating women and the disturbing stories keep coming. If we do our job in 25 days, Donald Trump will stop being on the news every single day. Reporter: At a Seattle fund-raiser Clinton lashing out at trump and his new strategy of scorched Earth attacks. Clinton getting some help from her top surrogate, president Obama, on the road in Ohio Friday, he unleashed on trump. And he figures if he makes our applications just toxic then maybe you'll just figure out you got no good choices and you just get disscourcouraged and don't vote. Reporter: Laying them out in stark term. Equality is on the balance lot. Kindness is on the ballot. Democracy itself is on the ballot right thought. Reporter: Meanwhile, Clinton answering new questions under oath about her private e-mail server, her team submitting written answers in a lawsuit filed by the conservative group judicial watch asked about details of her decision to use private e-mail, Clinton answered 20 different times with a variation of do not recall. The thing that you should be apologizing for are the 33,000 e-mails that you deleted. All right, Devin, wikileaks has claimed they have 50,000 e-mails from the Clinton campaign so far they've released roughly 11,000 so when will they be releasing more and what can we expect? Reporter: Paula, wikileaks says they plan to release thousands of pages every day up till the election. Now, keep in mind these are e-mails from Clinton campaign manager John podesta's hacked account. So far no bombshell in here but they do reveal insensitive language towards catholics and Latinos, some reveal the calculated highly calculated inner workings of the team. The Clinton team is not confirming the authenticity but claim Russia is behind them to help Donald Trump. Paula and Dan. 24 more days of this, Devin, th thank you. For analysis we bring in Kristen Soltis Anderson who joins us from Washington this morning. Good morning, Kristen. Reporter: Good morning. So first and foremost trump is saying this is all a conspiracy, a coordinated effort between the media, the Clinton campaign, as well as foreign governments. But is that even possible? Donald Trump is certainly choosing to call out a number of different groups that voters really don't trust, whether it's the media, whether it's foreign corporations or governments and whether it's the Clinton campaign, it's easy for Donald Trump to kind of pit himself against these things that people don't like. Whether it's coordination, I think it's much more likely this is what in campaign world we know as an oppo dump, where one campaign digs up dirt on the opponent and then feeds it strategically to different media outlets so on Wednesday night when these allegations began to come out in full you saw media outlet as cross the country print and online and TV, you saw folks in local markets that are key to this election all running with the story, it's not necessarily a conspiracy but it certainly is well coordinated by the Clinton campaign. In a Normal world where Donald Trump's alleged sexual misconduct wasn't dominating the news these wikileaks e-mail dumps from Hillary Clinton's campaign chief would be the top story. So, I'm just -- as a pollster are these leaks even making a dent in your mind? The reason these wouldn't make a dent already they're confirming what many voters believe about Hillary Clinton, we've seen in polls for the last over a year that people don't necessarily trust her, that they think she holds different positions behind closed doors. The things in here that might be the most damaging are the sort of insulting comments about catholic, about Latinos, groups that the Clinton campaign would like to hang on to in this election but for the most part when it comes to behind the scenes e-mails versus allegations of sexual misconduct, one certainly is going to get more attention than the other so I suspect this is unlikely to make a big headline unless we see something that really changes people's perception of Hillary Clinton. And, Kristen, as a pollster we know those "Access Hollywood" tapes were really damaging but any sense of the consequences so far of these sexual assault allegations on trump? Before all of this came out Donald Trump tended to be at about 42% in most polling averages. If he was going up or down, against Hillary Clinton it was mostly because Hillary Clinton's numbers were moving. We've now in the last couple of days seen at least two major national polls come out with Donald Trump only at 38% of the vote. Meaning it's not just that he's losing these independents or swing voters but he's also bleeding from his own core base of supporters. That's going to make it much hard story put together the 270 electoral votes he needs to become president. Thanks for joining us. 24 more days until the election but four more until the final presidential debate. ABC's chief anchor George Stephanopoulos will lead the coverage starting at 9:00 eastern. That's twice you mentioned 24 days. Somebody may be ready for this thing to be over.

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