WASHINGTON — Bill and Hillary Clinton are fighting back against critics as if they are waging another campaign, the clearest sign yet that, perhaps, they are.

The former secretary of state and her former president husband are defending their records, showing off their health and humor and raising money for fellow Democrats, fresh indications that Hillary Clinton has her eye on running for president in 2016.

The onetime first lady was attending her first political event of the year on Thursday, a New York fundraiser for Pennsylvania congressional candidate Marjorie Margolies, who is mother-in-law to the Clintons’ daughter, Chelsea. The former president has been a steady rainmaker for Democrats this year, raising money for hopefuls from Arkansas to Florida, Kentucky, Michigan and Maryland.

Confronting Republican critics, the Clintons responded cooly to suggestions by Republican strategist Karl Rove that Hillary Clinton may have suffered health problems more serious than she acknowledged after a concussion and hospitalization in late 2012.

The former president mused Wednesday that Rove’s doubt-casting on Hillary Clinton’s health could be a sign of more attacks to come.

“You can’t be too upset about it, it’s just the beginning. They’ll get better and better at it,” Clinton said. “It’s just part of the deal.” Clinton vouched for his wife’s good health.

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Rove disputed reports that he suggested Hillary Clinton suffered a brain injury but said her health would be relevant if she runs again in 2016. His comments brought a stinging rebuke from Mrs. Clinton’s advisers, the type of response common in a presidential campaign but unusual since Mrs. Clinton left the Obama administration last year.

“They are scared of what she has achieved and what she has to offer,” said Clinton spokesman Nick Merrill.

Former Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell, a Clinton supporter, said Rove’s comments were “an attempt to dissuade Hillary from becoming a candidate” but said the Clinton response should not imply that Hillary Clinton had made any decisions.

“Hillary’s people are doing all these things with a hope that she will become a candidate. This is what a candidate should be doing in the early stages, but I don’t necessarily think that means she’s decided yet,” Rendell said.

Republicans have signaled that they will raise the former first lady’s health and age – she would turn 69 about a week before the 2016 election – and her record at the State Department, including her handling of the 2012 terrorist attack on a diplomatic outpost in Benghazi, Libya, that killed four Americans, including the U.S. ambassador.

On Capitol Hill, Republicans offered another reminder Thursday of how they will maintain a steady drumbeat on the Benghazi attacks.

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Sens. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H., renewed a call for a joint select committee, which Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid has rejected. They suggested weakness in Clinton’s decision to skip a round of Sunday talk shows five days after the Sept. 11, 2012, attack and allow then-United Nations Ambassador Susan Rice to take her place.

“What does that say about Benghazi and her leadership ability?” Graham asked reporters at a news conference.

Clinton is expected to tell her side of the Benghazi story next month, when her new book, “Hard Choices,” is released. She has offered a preview in recent speeches, describing her work with Obama to curb Iran’s nuclear ambitions, lay the foundation for Middle East peace and help Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng.

Bill Clinton, meanwhile, has sought to remind people of his administration’s economic record. During a recent Georgetown University speech, he pointed to his creation of nearly 23 million jobs.

More immediately, the Clintons are helping Margolies, a former Pennsylvania congresswoman, leading up to her May 20 primary for a House seat.

Hillary Clinton’s event for Margolies was being held at the New York home of Lynn Forester de Rothschild, a major donor for her 2008 campaign. Bill Clinton, meanwhile, is appearing in a television ad for Margolies, vouching for her as someone “who will make you proud.”

The former president on Tuesday helped rake in $1 million at a Potomac, Md., fundraiser for Maryland Lt. Gov. Anthony Brown, who hopes to succeed outgoing Gov. Martin O’Malley, D-Md. Clinton has appeared at fundraisers for Alison Lundergan Grimes, a Kentucky Democrat challenging Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell, and longtime allies like Mike Ross, who is running for Arkansas governor.


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