15:21

Bill Clinton is asking New Hampshire voters to reimagine the 1992 Democratic primary and make his wife, former secretary of state Hillary Clinton, a “comeback kid,” writes the Guardian’s Lauren Gambino from inside a Keene, New Hampshire, rally:

“I hope New Hampshire will remember, this is 1992 on steroids,” said Clinton, whose 1992 campaigned sparked to life with a second-place finish in the Granite State. “You need to respond on steroids and you’ll never regret it.”



It’s like steroids. Know what I mean? Photograph: John Locher/AP

Bill Clinton delivered a low-key speech to a packed crowd at Keene Middle School, where Hillary Clinton previously held a town hall to discuss the regional heroin epidemic.

Clinton said his wife’s attention to issues such as the opioid epidemic and Flint water crisis were examples of how she would tackle big issues – the economy and foreign policy – without forgetting about the smaller ones.

Clinton criticized Sanders’s for labeling the groups that have endorsed his wife “establishment”, especially Planned Parenthood. “We need a debate, not name-calling,” he said. “We need anger and answers,” he said. “We can start with resentment but in the end results are all that matters.”

In a final pitch, Clinton returned to one of his favorite lines.