Congressional candidate Vincent Gentile is once again accusing his Republican opponent, Dan Donovan, of dodging debates after the pair had separate sit-down interviews at the ABC studios Friday. NY1's Courtney Gross filed the following report.

Dan Donovan and Vincent Gentile have one weekend more to bring voters to their corner.

"I feel great," Gentile said. "The groups are organizing. We are coming together."

"Everyone I meet is giving me encouragement," Donovan said.

It's unlikely these two will meet before Election Day.

"The case of the missing candidate continues with Mr. Donovan," Gentile said.

"I don't know. My staff does the scheduling for the communications end of the campaign," Donovan said.

Gentile is once again accusing the Staten Island district attorney of dodging debates. The two were both interviewed at the ABC studio on Friday, but in two separate sit-down interviews.

The Gentile campaign shared an email chain with NY1. They say it proves ABC wanted the two candidates to appear in studio for a debate.

The two candidates have debated on NY1 and at a Brooklyn forum, but Donovan has skipped several other opportunities to face off against his opponent.

"I was offered an opportunity to come into ABC to speak to them about the race, so we took that offer," Donovan said. "We're doing it this afternoon. It will be aired on Sunday. So my staff arranged that."

"He could have debated me. He just refuses to debate this time, as he has for six other debates, which is a total disrespect of the electorate," Gentile said.

The Donovan campaign called that mudslinging.

Perhaps the Republican is getting his message out in other ways. In a robocall, former mayor Rudolph Giuliani says, "Dan has a long record of service, which includes taking dangerous criminals off our streets as district attorney and working with me to close the Fresh Kills landfill."

After Giuliani campaigned with Donovan earlier this week on Staten Island, voters should expect to get a call from that familiar voice vouching for the district attorney.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is also running an ad through Election Day to bring voters to Donovan's corner.

"He fights for Staten Islanders. He understands the issues on Staten Island, and he does what is right," the ad says.

So far, it is the only independent group spending money on the race. The price tag is $125,000.