• Hillary Clinton has accused President Donald Trump of copying her 2016 election slogan “Stronger Together.”
  • The GOP shared an image of Trump saying “We’re only getting stronger together” – a phrase he used during his border-wall rally in El Paso, Texas, on Monday.
  • The Republican Party defended using the phrase, with a spokesman saying: “When you lose your campaign, you lose your monopoly on any slogans.”
  • The GOP also replied to Clinton, saying: “How about this: We’ll give you your slogan back if you run again.”

Hillary Clinton mocked President Donald Trump and the Republican Party after the party’s Twitter account used wording from her 2016 presidential campaign slogan, encouraging the president to “copy” her policies on healthcare and voting rights as well.

The GOP had shared a photo of Trump on Twitter that quoted him as saying “We’re only getting stronger together” – a phrase during he used during his border-wall rally in El Paso, Texas, on Monday.

But users were quick to notice the phrase’s similarity to Clinton’s “Stronger Together” slogan.

https://twitter.com/molly_knight/status/1095165999437889536?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw

Clinton responded on Tuesday, suggesting that Trump "copy my plan on health care, a fairer tax system, and voting rights."

Clinton also shared a link to her website, where she lists the issues she prioritized during her 2016 election bid.

On the website, she calls for "universal, quality, affordable health care for everyone in America," a tax system that makes sure "the wealthy, Wall Street, and corporations pay their fair share in taxes," and a system that is "making it easier to vote, not harder."

The site also lists policies including strengthening women's rights, criminal-justice reform, and gun-violence prevention.

Hillary Clinton 2016 rally stronger together

Foto: A supporter with a "Stronger Together" sign at a rally for Clinton in November 2016.sourcePeter Zay/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

The GOP responded to Clinton, writing: "How about this: We'll give you your slogan back if you run again."

Read more: Hillary Clinton is not running for president in 2020, former campaign chairman says

"When you lose your campaign, you lose your monopoly on any slogans," Steve Guest, a Republican National Committee spokesman, told Fox News on Tuesday.

Clinton also wrote a book called "Stronger Together" with Sen. Tim Kaine, her running mate in the 2016 election.

Clinton's 2016 campaign tested 84 slogans before it settled on "Stronger Together," according to CNN.