As millions of voters head to the polls on Super Tuesday, Hillary Clinton is reminding them that student loan debt is a crisis she’s prepared to solve.

The former Secretary of State took to LinkedIn Monday with a post describing her conversations on the campaign trail with young Americans who are struggling to grow their small businesses, buy a home or get married because of their student debt burden. Clinton then goes on to outline her plans to help Americans burdened by debt: Allowing borrowers to refinance their loans at lower interest rates, expanding debt forgiveness programs and making it easier for borrowers to pay off their loans as a percentage of their income.

“It’s not enough to make college more affordable — we need to help people with the debt they already have,” she writes. “And we have to take on this problem for future generations.”

At this point her message is hardly revolutionary — Clinton outlined these proposals as part of her College Compact in August and college affordability has featured prominently both in Democratic debates and on the campaign trail. But by reiterating her interest in slashing student debt, particularly on a digital medium filled with job seekers, Clinton is likely looking to reach younger voters, said Joelle Gamble, the national director for the Roosevelt Network, which organizes college students across the country around national, state and local policy initiatives.

Indeed, more than 60% of voters between the ages of 18 and 34 said student debt was a “major influencer” in how they would vote, according to a December poll of 800 voters by Young Invincibles, a millennial advocacy group. It’s no secret that Clinton has been struggling with this demographic. Clinton’s Democratic rival Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) won 84% of the 17-29 voting bloc in the Iowa Democratic caucus and though he was defeated by a landslide in South Carolina’s primary over the weekend, Sanders’ called his performance among young voters the only bright spot on ABC’s “This Week.”

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The post is “a sign that she’s starting to look back at a young voters heading into Super Tuesday and trying to make some ground into getting some support,” said Gamble, who at 25, fits neatly into the millennial demographic.

Still, she said for Clinton’s pitch to young voters to truly resonate it has to go beyond simply fixing student debt. Instead, student loan reform needs to be piece of a commitment to upend the status quo that sold millennials a “bill of goods” that never came to fruition when they graduated into tough economic times, often with high levels of debt, she said.

Even if Clinton’s LinkedIn pitch is enough to sway some younger voters, they may have little influence on the Super Tuesday outcome. Just two of the 12 states voting on Super Tuesday — Virginia and Colorado — rank in the top 10 of states where young voters will have an outsize impact, according to data from the Center for Information & Research on Civic Learning and Engagement, a youth-focused research organization.

In addition, it may be difficult for young voters to get to the polls, as Super Tuesday falls during spring break at many colleges, Gamble noted. “There’s a lot of potential but it really depends on how well we set up the system to allow people to participate,” she said.