Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton toured a working-class neighborhood today to stress her blue-collar background and kept up the attack on rival Barack Obama's remarks about small-town voters.
With the next major Democratic vote nine days away in Pennsylvania, Senator Clinton walked through a section of Scranton, where she spent some time as a child and near where her father is buried, to show that she connected with the middle-class voter.
But it was Senator Obama's week-old comments saying economic problems led many bitter and frustrated voters in small towns to "cling" to their guns and religion that still roiled the political agenda and Sunday talk shows.
"Senator Obama has not owned up to what he said and taken accountability for it," said Ms Clinton, who has called the remarks elitist and divisive. "What people are looking for is an explanation."
The furore could threaten Mr Obama's chances in Pennsylvania, which votes on April 22nd to help pick a Democratic candidate to run against Republican John McCain in November's presidential election.
"This is about how people look at the Democratic Party and the Democratic Party leadership," Ms Clinton said. "We have been working very hard to make it clear we have millions of Democrats who are church going and gun owning and we are tired of having Republicans or frankly our own Democrats give any ammunition to Republicans.
"What happens then is that Republicans take advantage of the situation," said the New York senator, who has campaigned as the most electable Democrat in November.
The two Democratic candidates were to appear at a forum on faith and values near Harrisburg later on Sunday and the recent comments were certain to be part of the dialogue.
Mr Obama, the Illinois senator who would be the first black US president, had been closing the gap in the polls in the state and was cutting into the large lead that Clinton once held.
He leads her in pledged delegates won in state contests but neither is likely to reach the 2,024 needed for nomination without support of the nearly 800 superdelegates.
Mr Obama said yesterday he was sorry if his remarks offended anyone and his supporters said he would weather the flap.