Wisconsin is a key state in the 2016 race for the White House as Trump looks to hold off Ted Cruz and avoid a contested convention in July. For Clinton, the big need is stem any tide of Bernie Sanders' support that keeps her from turning her attention to the general election.
In his last minute efforts to woo voters, Trump, 69, addressed a series of rallies in Wisconsin hoping to bridge the gap with Cruz, 45, who is expected to win this crucial state, according to latest polls.
"I can be presidential, but if I was presidential I would only have - about 20 percent of you would be here because it would be boring as hell, I will say," he said.
"We started off with 17 people and now got two left. I call them the leftovers, right? I now have two left and we're way up on both of them," he said.
A Trump loss in Wisconsin, experts and US media said, would very well reset the Republican presidential race.
While it would not throw him out of the race, but would make things difficult for him on the path to winning the party's presidential nomination by gaining 1,237 delegates.
"A loss for Trump in particular could reset a Republican contest that has been dominated by his outsider candidacy and outsize media presence," The Washington Post reported.
Clinton, 68, is in a similarly tight race with Senator Sanders. Winning Wisconsin would give Sanders a fresh dose of momentum - and perhaps new credibility for his claim that he can catch Clinton in the delegate count and win the Democratic nomination.
If Trump claims no delegates in Wisconsin, he would have
to win 70 per cent of the remaining bound delegates, the financial daily said.
On the other hand, Sanders is leading the polls in Wisconsin but by a smaller margin. In the Fox Business poll, Sanders received 48 per cent of the vote and Clinton 43 per cent.
A Policy Polling survey, conducted on behalf of VoteVets Action Fund, finds Sanders is the favourite in the Democratic primary, leading Clinton 49-43.
Among Democrats, Clinton has 1,712 delegates, including 469 super delegates, leaving her 671 short of the number needed for the nomination. Sanders has 1,011 but only 31 super delegates.
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