Democratic presidential candidate Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton was joined by her mother and daughter as she vowed "change across the generations" and stepped up her pitch to the women voters who could hold the key to Iowa's caucuses.
The Midwestern state's caucuses, neighborhood meetings at which voters determine which candidates to support, launch the presidential nominating season in less than four weeks.
"We're getting close to the caucuses," Clinton said. "I always think it's better to go to the caucuses with a buddy. Today, I've got some buddies with me."
Those "buddies" included 88-year-old mother Dorothy Rodham and 27-year-old daughter Chelsea Clinton, making her first appearance with her mother on the trail in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination.
Opening the swing, Clinton noted that her family is able to care for her mother as she ages.
"I'm fortunate, my mother lives with Bill and me," Clinton said. "Lots of times she has more energy than we do."
Clinton noted that her mother fits the description of women who were born before American women got the right to vote, and are now pushing to elect the first woman president.
"She has seen a lot happen and change in our country," Clinton said.
Clinton's mother joined her on the campaign trail on Friday night, and Chelsea, who works in New York City's financial sector, joined her on Saturday morning. Neither spoke at the campaign events, but Chelsea worked a crowd hard as they opened the day.
Clinton used the occasion to trot out a plan to bolster long-term care, including tax benefits for caregivers and the elderly. She repeatedly pointed to her ability to care for her own mother as she ages.
"I don't think having my mother with me is a burden, I think it's a joy," Clinton said. "It isn't easy to do and a lot of families don't have a lot of options."
Issues of long-term care and building families will be a focus of her presidency, Clinton said.
Clinton is locked in a tight battle with rivals Senator Barack Obama and former senator John Edwards in the race for Iowa's Jan. 3 caucuses, a competition in which the stakes are very high. Although the Iowa race is close, Clinton has commanding leads in early primary election states like New Hampshire and South Carolina, and some strategists argue that a win in competitive Iowa could propel her toward the nomination.
The parties choose their candidates in August and September and the general election is in November.
While Obama was seeking the spotlight on Saturday by bringing in talk show maven Oprah Winfrey, Clinton was fast making her campaign a family business.
While her mother and daughter joined her in Iowa, her husband campaigned for her in another early voting state, South Carolina, and was headed back to the Iowa on Monday for a swing focused on college campuses.
By focusing on women and long-term care, Clinton was targeting two crucial groups in the state's electorate -- women and seniors. More than 60 percent of caucus-goers in the last election cycle were over 50 and the state has one of highest populations in the country over 85.
Clinton closed her campaign swing with a town hall-style meeting in Washington, Iowa, before about 450 people jammed into the local fire station. Under questioning, she vowed to toughen laws governing labeling of food.
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