Donald Trump told a screaming crowd of supporters in Green Bay, Wisconsin on Monday night that electing him is the best way to end the 'corruption' exhibited in the Hillary Clinton investigative documents released by the FBI earlier in the day.

And he called for the ouster of Patrick Kennedy, the State Department undersecretary at the center of Monday's firestorm.

Calling Clinton-related corruption 'magnitudes worse than Watergate,' Trump castigated Kennedy for trying to persuade the bureau to declassify one of Hillary Clinton's emails related to the 2012 Benghazi, Libya terror attack.

'Kennedy illegally pressured the FBI to un-classify emails from Hillary's illegal server,' he said. 'That's a lot of illegality in that one statement!'

'In other words, the State Department was trying to cover up Hillary’s crimes of sending classified information on a server our enemies could easily access, by trying to reverse the classification,' Trump said.

GET HIM OUT! Donald Trump demanded the resignation of State Department Undersecretary for Management Patrick Kennedy on Monday after the diplomat was caught in an FBI report asking agents to help him bury a Hillary Clinton email related to the Benghazi terror attacks

BUSTED: State Department Undersecretary Patrick Kennedy, a newly released FBI file shows, discussed the possibility of approving the FBI's request for more personnel funding if the agency helped him get rid of one email

He called his Democratic opponent 'the most corrupt person effort to run for president,' and said the State Department's plan to protect her was part of 'a criminal conspiracy' that led to the deletion of 33,000 emails after the Republican-controlled U.S. House of Representatives had issued a subpoena for them.

'It's time to drain the swamp in Washington, D.C.,' he said.

Kennedy, according to an FBI agent who interviewed him, discussed a 'quid pro quo' in exchange for declassifying the email – which would have allowed the State Department to bury it in a basement, 'never to be seen again,' through a loophole in the Freedom of Information Act.

That proposed arrangement, which ultimately did not come to fruition, 'is felony corruption by any standard,' according to Trump.

And Kennedy, he said 'needs to resign.'

Monday's speech was punctuated by nearly a dozen protests – including one from three women who shouted: 'Animal liberation now.'

One threw fake money, colored red to represent blood, at TV cameras.

Trump mocked her pipsqueaky voice.

I'LL WIN! Trump said there's a hidden 'undercurrent' of voters who pollsters can't see, and who will come out of the woodwork to send him to the White House

'NEVER TO BE SEEN AGAIN': Kennedy asked the FBI to help him bury the Benghazi-related emails by declassifying it so he could use a loophole in the Freedom of Information Act to keep it from public view

NO SALE: The FBI ultimately told Kennedy that it wouldn't help him declassify the email

The Republican presidential nominee's plan to overcome his polling disadvantage in a handful of swing states hinges on depressing enthusiasm among Clinton's base of voters, according to a Trump campaign aide.

He predicted Monday that he will win, powered by a groundswell of first-time voters on a scale larger than the group that came out of nowhere to deliver him primary election victories.

'There's an undercurrent that they can't poll!' he boasted.

Trump is also fighting on a separate battlefield-front against reporters and editors, deriding them regularly as a sinister force hoping to tip the November election in Clinton's direction.

'The media is trying to rig the election by giving credence to false stories that have no validity,' Trump said, 'and making it front page news, only to poison the minds of the American voters.'

That was a reference to a series of bombshell stories involving accusations from nine women who say he has kissed them, groped them, or made other sexual advances against their will.

'The media is an extension of the Clinton Campaign,' he said.

SHOWTIME: The Republican presidential nominee proposed five reforms designed to shut the revolving door between government agencies and lobbying firms

STEALING THE SHOW: At the end of his speech, Trump invited two children on stage – a sequel to a theatrical stunt he tried for the first time in Pennsylvania last week

He reiterated his blanket denials of the women's claims, complaining that news outlets are 'giving credence – and this is so true! – to false stories that have no validity.'

'They take stories with absolutely nothing, that didn't exist, and they put it on the front page because they want to poison the minds of the american voter.'

He said stories that have proved embarrassing to his campaign and his family described 'events that never happened.'

Both Trump and retired Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn harped on a report from the Center for Public Integrity that found 96 per cent of the money journalists and editors donated to presidential candidates in the current election cycle went to Clinton.

'There is an assault – there is a barrage attack going on by the media against Donald Trump,' Flynn said during a warmup speech. 'And they know it.'

Trump specifically mocked Democratic National Committee interim chair Donna Brazile for leaking a question to the Clinton campaign in advance of a CNN-hosted town hall.

'Can you imagine if Donald Trump got the questions in advance? they'd reinvent the electric chair.'

'TAKE THE MONEY!!!' Hillary Clinton's communications director Jennifer Palmieri (right) told campaign chairman John Podesta (left) that he should accept donations from American lobbyists who may have funneled the money into the U.S. from outside the country, according to emails hacked from Podesta's account

Trump also latched on to a separate story that astonished politics-watchers on Monday, stemming from the tenth coordinated leak of messages hacked from Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta's email account.

In a discussion about the practical implications of accepting donations form Americans who lobby on behald of foreign governments, campaign communications director Jennifer Palmieri exclaimed: 'Take the money!!!'

'This is money bundled by people registered as lobbyists on behalf of foreign governments,' Trump underscored.

Trump laid out five ethics proposals that he said would lessen the opportunity for corruption to infect executive branch agencies if he becomes president.

They include a ban on all executive branch officials lobbying the government for five years after they leave government service.

President Bill Clinton instituted a similar measure via executive order in 1993 but lifted it as his eight years in the White House wound down – effectively de-fanging the rule and allowing his senior aides to cash in.

Trump said he would ask federal legislators to pass a law instead, tying future presidents' hands – and extending the ban to former members of Congress and their staff members.

Stricter still would be a separate Trump proposal to ban senior executive branch officials from lobbying on behalf of foreign governments for the rest of their lives.

He also said he would ask Congress to make it a crime for registered foreign lobbyists to pour their overseas clients' money into American elections.

And in a more technical suggestion, he proposed expanding the legal definition of 'lobbyist' to include 'consultants' and advisers' who classify themselves differently even though 'we all know they are lobbyists.'

The Green Bay rally, just a few miles from Lambeau Field, drew an NFL legend to begin the program.

Kabeer Gbaja-Biamila, the Green Bay Packers' all-time defensive sack leader, told cheering Trump-backers that 'Trump needs us to help him to get into the White House.'

He led the crowd in reciting the Lord's Prayer, a first for a Trump rally.

LAMBEAU LEAP: Kabeer Gbaja-Biamila, the Green Bay Packers' all-time defensive sack leader known to fans as 'KGB,' led Trump-backers in the Lord's Prayer

After the cameo from Kabeer Gbaja-Biamila – known to Packers fans as 'KGB' – a few fans in the back of the KI Convention Center delivered a verdict on the quarterback of the rival San Francisco 49ers who has been protesting against the National Anthem.

'Kaepernick's a bum! Kaepernick's a bum! they yelled.

A larger group had shouted ten minutes earlier at the Speaker of the House, a Wisconsin lawmaker who has refused to defend Trump as he weathers the storm of sexual-misconduct allegations.

'Paul Ryan sucks!' they screamed. 'Paul Ryan sucks!'

An hour later, Trump the showman was returning to a bit of stage theatrics he tried for the first time last week in Pennsylvania, inviting two children on stage while he spoke.

'Where are your parents?' he asked the first one, an African-American girl in a pink dress.

'Wow! Congratulations! What a job!' he told the pair in the front section of the audience. 'They did a good job!'

he asked the second child: 'Do you love Wisconsin?' and got a meek 'Yes.'

'Isn't that what it's all about?' he asked, as applause rained down.