Donald Trump's daughter-in-law Lara Trump, married to middle son Eric, hinted on 'Fox & Friends' this morning that the Republican nominee may be holding onto an 'October surprise' to drop on Hillary Clinton.

'Well there's still a couple days left in October,' said Lara Trump. 'We've got some stuff up our sleeve.'

With 15 days left until Election Day, Lara Trump – appearing on the program with Lynne Patton, the vice president of the Eric Trump Foundation – said that she and the family were 'feeling great,' while talking about the tough realities of October, always a brutal month in presidential politics.

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Donald Trump's daughter-in-law Lara Trump hinted the campaign had something 'up our sleeve' that could be damaging to Hillary Clinton in the last 15 days of the race

Lynne Patton (left), the vice president of the Eric Trump Foundation, spoke to 'Fox & Friends' alongside Lara Trump (right), about the character of GOP nominee Donald Trump

'Well, listen, like he said, people have been preparing us for October and the last couple weeks leading up to the election and for quite some time,' she said, echoing comments her husband made yesterday on 'This Week' with George Stephanopoulos.

'I think we all knew it would be tough, but this is new to all of us,' she continued.

'None of us have ever been involved in politics and I don't think anything can prepare you for, daily, your family member just getting bludgeoned by the media, all angles, all sides, it has been tough,' she relented.

Yesterday, Lara's husband Eric, sat down with Stephanopoulos to talk about the race and made many of the same points.

He defended his father against sexual assault allegations thrown at the Republican nominee post-'p****' video and debate denial that Trump actually groped and kissed women without their consent.

Lara Trump's husband Eric Trump came on 'This Week' with George Stephanopoulos and said his dad was right to attack his accusers: 'He's a great fighter'

More to come? Hillary Clinton's campaign has denied having anything to do with at least 12 women coming out and saying they were groped or kissed by Trump

'My father is a guy who will fight and he will fight for this country and he's always fought for himself,' Eric said when Stephanopoulos asked him about his father's threat to sue his accusers after the presidential election.

When Stephanopoulos pointed out that one of the accusers, People magazine reporter Natasha Stoynoff, had told six different friends and colleagues about what happened at the time, Eric Trump said he still didn't buy it.

'George, I just don't believe it, I just don't believe it. And then you come out with – with three weeks left in an election, three weeks left in an election. And you know what somebody told me?' Eric Trump said.

'They go, Eric, get ready for October. They told me this months and months ago, get ready for October. Your family will live through the worst, most unthinkable, hardest month of your lives. Get ready for October,' the Trump son continued.

'What they'll throw at you, what the Clinton machine will throw at you, you know, the dirty tricks, the things that will come out, the things that they'll orchestrate,' he added.

The Clinton campaign has denied having anything to do with at least 12 women coming out and saying they were groped or kissed by Trump.

Looking on the bright side, Lara Trump noted that: 'It actually has brought us closer together as a family.'

'Because when you go through something like this. You actually have each other and I'm actually grateful for that,' she said.

Lara Trump, along with Patton, are part of a coalition of female surrogates trying to improve The Donald's numbers among women voters.

'Well, you know, this started very organically, our women empowerment tour,' Patton explained. 'It was a bunch of women, myself, Lara, Omarosa, Katrina Pierson, who all know Mr. Trump in personal ways, in different ways, the softer side of him, and we were tired of the false narrative that was out there.'

'And we decided to join together, go out on the road and with Diamond and Silk too, who I'm sure that you know, and tell our version of Mr. Trump that we know, which is the private Mr. Trump, which is the true Mr. Trump, which is the Mr. Trump that we know and love,' Patton continued.

Lara Trump vouched for her father-in-law, explaining that while it was 'intimidating to meet your future in-laws in any capacity' she was 'shocked by how engaging he was with me.'

'When Donald Trump talks to you one-on-one he looks you in the eye, he speaks very softly, he's very different than the Donald Trump we see onstage,' she testified. 'And I was really impressed by that personal level that he got down to with me.'

Echoing her husband's interview with Stephanopoulos, Lara Trump also floated the idea that polling was off, using the massive crowds still coming to Trump rallies as an indicator.

An ABC News national poll released yesterday showed the Republican nominee down by 12 points against Clinton.

'You see the support that Donald Trump has and there's no disputing, the people that are coming to these rallies, he's still getting 15 - 20,000 people, three times a day sometimes at these rallies, we feel really good,' Lara Trump said.

'I think that the polls really don't reflect the enthusiasm that exists for Donald Trump out there,' she argued.