Hillary Clinton criticizes anew Donald Trump for emboldening racial hate groups, saying his comments on race and attempts to win black voters allowed the Republican Party to harbor a "radical fringe".

In response to Trump's "what do you have to lose?" outcry addressed to black voters in a Virginia rally, Clinton, in a Nevada assembly, retorted: "What do you have to lose? The answer is everything!"

Clinton further brought up dirt coming from Trump's controversial past, specifically when the Justice Department sued the business mogul early on in his career for turning away blacks and Latinos from renting apartments from his company.

She went on to say that Trump's real estate company used the letter "C" to denote "colored."

Trump's disjoint with the rest of the Republican Party's figureheads also formed part of Clinton's rally speech, as she brought up his questionable remarks against the partiality of Gonzalo Curiel, an Indiana judge of Mexican descent, on his Trump University case.

House Speaker and top Republican Paul Ryan responded to the controversy by calling Trump remarks as the "textbook definition of racism."

Going further, Clinton criticized the appointment of Breitbart figurehead Stephen Bannon, as the new chief executive of the Trump campaign.

She noted that the conservative website espouses "Racist ideas. Race-baiting ideas. Anti-Muslim and anti-immigrant ideas - all key tenets making up an emerging racist ideology known as the 'alt-right.'" Alt-right, she clarified, stands for "alternative right."

Bannon's incorporation into the Trump campaign effectively represents the Republican candidate's agreement to represent the alt-right's interests. "It's like nothing we've heard before from a nominee for president of the United States," she said.

Trump, in his Twitter account, said that Clinton is merely leveraging from the issue to get African-American voters, accusing her of being "all talk and no action."