Losing ground in the polls in the first nominating state of Iowa, Democratic presidential frontrunner Hillary Clinton has gone on the attack against her closest rival, Vermont senator Bernie Sanders.
At a campaign stop in northeast Iowa, Ms Clinton challenged Mr Sanders on his health care plan, adding another line of attack on the self-professed democratic socialist beyond gun safety.
Mr Sanders wants "Medicare for all," a universal, single-payer healthcare system similar to European systems.
Ms Clinton, who wants to improve on president Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act, has described Mr Sanders’s plan as a “risky deal”.
“I don’t believe, number one, we should be starting over. We had enough of a fight to get to the Affordable Care Act. So I don’t want to rip it up and start over,” she told supporters in Waterloo, Iowa.
National lead
Ms Clinton is struggling to convert her strong national lead over Mr Sanders into big gains in Iowa and
New Hampshire
, where voters will pick the parties’ presidential nominees in ballots early next month.
Until this week, she had, with an eye on the general election in November, been concentrating her attacks on Republicans.
Ms Clinton’s new strategy refocuses attention on Mr Sanders as she tries to win Iowa, a state she came third in during her first presidential campaign in 2008, a loss to Mr Obama she never recovered from.
An NBC News/Wall Street Journal/Marist poll on Sunday put the former senator and secretary of state at 48 per cent, just three points ahead of Mr Sanders among likely Democratic voters in Iowa's caucuses on February 1st.
However, a poll from Quinnipiac University on Tuesday put Mr Sanders five points ahead of Ms Clinton in Iowa, 49 per cent to 44 per cent.And a new poll from Monmouth University put Mr Sanders's lead over Ms Clinton in New Hampshire at 14 points, at 53 per cent to 39 per cent. New Hampshire votes in a primary on February 9th.
Ms Clinton has argued that she is the only candidate running for the Democratic nomination who can beat the Republican in November.
Mr Sanders, however, fares well in polls in hypothetical match-ups with Republican frontrunners Donald Trump and Ted Cruz.
Gun immunity
The former first lady has continued to challenge the senator on gun controls, pointing to his 2005
Senate
vote that gave gun manufacturers and sellers immunity from legal actions.
“A candidate who was originally thought to be the anointed candidate, to be the inevitable candidate, is now locked in a very difficult race here in Iowa and New Hampshire,” said Mr Sanders on Monday.
“Obviously in that scenario, what people do is start attacking.”