The 2016 battleground states are getting visits from the candidates for president, who are are hitting similar notes with a little more than two weeks until Election Day. Josh Robin filed the following report.

It's starting to sound like closing argument time. 

"Get out and vote," said Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump. "Thank you, God bless you."

"I have now spent four-and-a-half hours on stage with Donald, proving once again I have the stamina to be president," said Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton. 

With little time for much new, the Democrat and Republican candidates are sticking to familiar messages.

"Either we win this election or we're going to lose our country," Trump said.

Clinton, in Cleveland, encourages early voting. So far, it's seen as mostly benefitting Democrats.

With the backdrop of Trump possibily refusing to concede, Clinton is also trying to tamp down the stark divisions unleashed this election cycle.

"I want to be every single American's president, whether you agree or disagree, whether you vote for me or against me," Clinton said.

But Thursday's tense Manhattan dinner remained on people's minds, a sign of the distaste oozing through this season. 

On Twitter, Clinton poked at Trump's boo-unleashing performance.

The enmity between the pair extends to supporters.

"The press always asks me, 'Don't I wish I were debating him?' No, I wish we were in high school. I can take him behind the gym. That's what I wish," said Vice President Joe Biden.

"The impending election also means more campaign commercials...with Hillary Clinton turning to a familiar face during the Democratic convention for a final pitch to voters in seven battleground states."  

"I want to ask Mr. Trump, would my son have a place in your America?" the narrator, Khizr Khan, says in the ad.

Khan's son, an Army captain, was killed in Iraq. The ad is a subtle reminder that Trump drew bipartisan criticism for maligning the grieving family after the speech.

A new Trump ad says Clinton won't change Washington.

"She's been there 30 years. Taxes went up, terrorism spread, jobs vanished," the ad says.

Trump has been lagging Clinton in ad spending.