"I know some of you are still shopping. I'd like to shop too. I hope during the course of this afternoon to convince some of you," Clinton told about 600 people packed into an elementary school gym in the town of North Liberty yesterday.
On February 1, voters in Iowa, in the US heartland, will cast the first ballots in the US presidential nominations process -- a long road to Election Day on November 8.
"As secretary of state, she stared down some of the toughest dictators in the world, and so I have no doubt that she can take on the Tea Party, and the gun lobby," said Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood, the influential US women's health care provider.
"She never blinks, she never wavers."
The message Clinton and her team sought to drive home was that her proposals are more realistic than those of Sanders, a self-proclaimed democratic socialist who has put taking down the financial elite and Wall Street at the heart of his campaign.
But Clinton fought back yesterday.
"I have taken on Wall Street for years!" she said. "I have a better plan to do it."
"No bank is too big to fail, and no executive is too big to jail," she added.
She also insisted on her foreign policy bona fides and the "very specific steps" she would take to defeat the Islamic State jihadist group.
Clinton devoted a long section of her stump speech to her role in the Osama bin Laden raid in 2011, which several of President Barack Obama's aides considered to be too dangerous and risky. She said she encouraged Obama to go ahead with it.
"We need to chart a steady course," she concluded -- suggesting that a Sanders administration would lack such stability.
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