HILLARY Clinton’s campaign is reeling after FBI Director Jim Comey announced the FBI had reopened its investigation into her email server.

Trump is now within shooting distance of Clinton’s popular vote. Her advantage has narrowed to five points, from seven points two week ago.

By some polls, all it requires is for a three-point shift away from her to Trump for her to lose her previously commanding lead, and with it the presidency.

Indeed, if Trump can shift the balance in the single swing state of Pennsylvania — which Clinton had previously led by nine points — his path to victory becomes a lot more plausible.

The momentum is with Trump, but Clinton remains ahead — all she has to do is hold onto her base, and make sure they turn out on election day.

Question is: How soft is Hillary Clinton’s support?

The answer is distressing for Democrat strategists for one very simple reason: Clinton’s supporters are not like Trump supporters.

By now, almost everyone on the planet has seen Donald Trump supporters at his countless rallies. They are rowdy, and most Trump supporters have a certain uniform, no matter where you are in the country. Lots of badges, patriotic T-shirts and — for the true aficionado — a “Make America Great Again” cap.

In fact, some Trump supporters are so enthusiastic that their support has been known to spill over into bouts of violence, especially against protesters who dare to interrupt their rallies.

This is a level of passion that hasn’t been seen for a Republican Presidential candidate in a generation. Nobody was going to risk their knuckles for Mitt Romney or John McCain.

But most of all, Trump’s supporters are defined by their chants. At every rally we’ve been to since January this year, the Trump chants have been a mainstay of his rallies. From the nationalistic “USA! USA! USA!”, to the xenophobic “Build the wall” to the vengeful “Lock her up!”, no Trump rally exists without lots of chants.

By comparison, if her recent rally in must-win Pennsylvania is anything to go by, Clinton’s supporters are a lot more circumspect.

After chatting to dozens of Clinton fans, we decided Clinton’s campaign needed our help. With the polls tightening, the campaign cannot afford to have lacklustre support. They need some chants. So we tried to get the Clinton crowd geed up before Hillary took to the stage.

The result? Well, let’s just say, if our efforts are anything to go by, Trump will be a shoe-in next Tuesday.

Watch the full video above.

The Chaser’s Charles Firth and James Schloeffel are currently in the USA on the campaign trail. You can catch all their antics over the coming weeks at www.chaser.news and news.com.au.