
President Barack Obama is urging voters to 'trust' him and cast their ballots tomorrow for Hillary Clinton.

Obama reminded rally-goers in Ann Arbor of the auto industry bailout he oversaw as president and the economic prosperity they had during Bill Clinton's White House tenure in the '90s.

'I think we've earned some credibility,' he said at an afternoon rally as he campaigned with Bill and Hillary's only daughter Chelsea.

But he spoke shortly before two next channels - CNN and Fox News - downgraded their prediction of how many states her mother is certain to win, with both now offering the startling prediction that she no longer has a lock on 270 electoral college votes.

And in Florida and North Carolina, Trump was said to be outperforming Mitt Romney in early voting, while in Colorado, the same effect could deliver him the state.

Chelsea greeted the president with a big hug as he took the stage in Michigan for this first of three rallies on Monday.

President Barack Obama is urging voters to 'trust' him and cast their ballots tomorrow for Hillary Clinton. He's seen here, today, in Ann Arbor, Michigan, with Hillary's daughter Chelsea

Chelsea greeted the president with a big hug as he took the stage in Michigan for this first of three rallies on Monday

Star power: President Obama drew the sort of crowds Hillary Clinton has struggled to attract as he spoke at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor

Obama reminded rally-goers in Ann Arbor of the auto industry bailout he oversaw as president, and the debt they owe to Bill Clinton for the economic prosperity of the 90s

Controversial figure: Wikileaks has revealed how Chelsea Clinton was accused of using the family's Clinton Foundation to fund her wedding to husband Marc Mezvisnky - whose father is a convicted fraudster - and even pay tax on cash she got from her multi-millionaire parents

Next stop New Hampshire: The President flew from Michigan to Portsmouth, N.H. for the next stage of his final campaign swing, using his star power in a state which is still in play

Outreach: The president was headed to Durham. N.H., for the second of his day's rallies for Hillary Clinton

It's not over: The tightening electoral map as predicted by CNN which has downgraded Clinton's solid lead to under the crucial 270 mark

The former first daughter said in her introduction of Obama that she 'inspired every single day' by 'all that he has accomplished for our country, for our world, for our future.'

It was her first public appearance since a new Wikileaks email which revealed how one of her father's closest aides, Doug Band, accused her of using the family Clinton Foundation charity to fund her wedding to Marc Mezvisky - whose father is a convicted fraudster - and even pay tax on gifts from her parents.

She has made no response to the charges.

Instead she spoke about the president and said: 'I'm so proud that my children were born when he was our president. We have to build on his remarkable legacy.'

In his remarks Obama empathized with her while batting down the ' crazy stuff' and 'outright lies about her mother that he said created a 'dust cloud of nonsense' during the campaign. His star power has now been used to an unprecedented extent to aid the Clinton campaign.

'I've had to bite my tongue,' the president said. 'I know Chelsea has. Can you imagine? Just crazy conspiracy theorizing.'

This morning Obama jetted off on Air Force One for his final act of the 2016 campaign: a three-state sprint for Hillary Clinton that ends with an ode to the founding fathers in Philadelphia.

He's making last-minute pleas to voters in Michigan and New Hampshire, states with limited early voting, this afternoon. He'll join his wife, all three Clintons, Jon Bon Jovi and Bruce Springsteen in Pennsylvania this evening.

Obama waxed nostalgic in Ann Arbor, talking about his favorite Disney shows and SpongeBob SquarePants, after telling voters he's feeling a little 'sentimental' going into Election Day. 'This is going to be my last, probably my last day of campaigning for a while,' he observed.

The sitting president is in the midst of a mad dash through the battleground states, where he's been trying to stir up black voters for his former secretary of state.

He took a break from campaigning on Saturday - he went golfing instead - but was back at it yesterday afternoon.

Since last Tuesday, Obama has hit the road every day, with the exception of Saturday, for Democrats and Clinton.

The commander in chief, who has been derided by Republicans as the campaigner in chief in the past, visited North Carolina and Florida twice each in that amount of time. He held a rally in Columbus, Ohio, as well.

The White House says the Clinton campaign is dictating the president's travel schedule. It has eagerly obliged to requests from the Democrat's operation to put the term-limited president's star power to use.

Obama's legacy is riding on a Clinton win.

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump says he'll end Obamacare, undo the president's Pacific Rim trade deal and reverse executive orders that keep some illegal immigrants from being sent home.

'All the progress we’ve made goes out the window if we don’t win this election,' Obama reminded his supporters Sunday in Orlando. 'W e’ve got to work our hearts out this week, these next few days, as if our future depends on it.'

He similarly told Michigan voters today that 'all that progress goes down the drain if we don’t win tomorrow.'

The president jetted off on Air Force One this morning for his final act of the 2016 campaign: a three-state sprint for Hillary Clinton that ends with an ode to the founding fathers in Philadelphia.

The president is pictured taking off from the White House aboard Marine One this morning

The Clinton campaign is relying on Obama to deliver the remaining votes it needs in states with large American-American populations like Michigan, North Carolina and Florida. The candidate made her final visit to the Sunshine State on Saturday.

'We win this election if we win Florida. If we win Florida, it’s a wrap. We win Florida, it’s over,' Obama said Sunday.

Obama prevailed in all of the states he's campaigned in over the last week except North Carolina - Ohio, Michigan, Florida, New Hampshire and Pennsylvania.

North Carolina's electoral college votes went to his Republican competitor, Mitt Romney, in a twist from 2008, when Obama brought home the state.

'We're not measuring ourselves against what happened in 2012. We're measuring ourselves against getting the electoral votes that we need to win,' Clinton's campaign chairman, John Podesta, told reporters Friday. 'We're feeling confident that we're still in an excellent shape to do that.'

The end-of-campaign visits to states the campaign says Clinton will win is a reflection of the outfit doing 'everything that we can' to get voters to the polls.

'We want to end with a crescendo of enthusiasm,' Podesta said of the bottom-of-the- ninth visits by Obama and Bill and Hillary Clinton to Michigan.

Obama was more forthcoming in his own assessment this afternoon. 'This race will be close here in Michigan, just like it will be in a lot of parts of the country,' he said.

Obama is making last-minute pleas to voters in Michigan and New Hampshire, states with limited early voting, this afternoon. He'll join his wife, the Clintons, Jon Bon Jovi and Bruce Springsteen in Pennsylvania this evening

Trump thinks he can turn the blue state red by turning out white, working class voters. Obama was boosted in Michigan in 2012 by African-Americans who may not come out for Clinton.

'Look, President Obama, was the first African-America president. So he had a level of enthusiasm, commitment that we're trying to push toward meeting, but obviously he had advantages there,' Podesta admitted on Friday.

Regardless, the senior Clinton aide said the campaign is 'feeling really good' about that state and North Carolina.

Obama sought to undermine Trump's support with blue collar workers in Michigan today with a claim that the Republican businessman opposed the bailout of the auto industry.

The president cropped a quote to say that Trump claimed he would have 'let it go bankrupt.'

What the billionaire actually said was, 'You could have let it go bankrupt, frankly, and rebuilt itself, and a lot of people felt it should happen. Or you could have done it the way it went.

'I could have done it either way. Either way would have been acceptable. I think you would have wound up in the same place,' Trump said.

Obama said the Trump backed bankruptcy 'could have cost a million jobs across this country. That could have killed Michigan’s economy.'

'But Donald Trump didn’t stop there. He actually suggested shipping Michigan’s auto jobs to states that don’t have unions so they can pay their workers less,' the president claimed. 'I mean, he said this. Look it up. He said, squeeze Michigan, make Michigan hurt. Then your autoworkers would have no choice but to accept less pay.

'That is not somebody who’s a champion for working people.'

Trump did suggest that jobs could be moved to lower paying states - as opposed to Mexico, where Ford said it was making a $2.5 billion investment.

The commander in chief, who has been derided by Republicans as the campaigner in chief in the past, visited North Carolina and Florida twice each in the past week. He held a rally in Columbus, Ohio, as well

Still, Obama used the comments to bash Trump over the head today.

'For all his tough talk on trade, the trade war he threatens to trigger might well damage the auto industry all over again,' the president stated.

An audience member shouted at the president in response, 'He’s got to go!'

Obama cashed in his chits with Michigan workers and frankly told them 'every small business owner, every barkeep, every teacher in communities that depend on the auto industry, I think I’ve earned some credibility here.

'When I tell you that Donald Trump is not the guy who’s going to look out for you, you need to listen. Don’t be bamboozled. Don’t fall for the okie-doke.'

The 70-year-old has 'has never shown any regard for working folks,' Obama said, while Hillary has 'plans to boost people’s wages, plans to help students with their college debt.