“Tens of millions of Americans made their voices heard. Today I just want to add mine,” Obama said in a video endorsement. “I’m with her.”
Obama won the state in 2008 and 2012, but Democrats expect a tough fight this year.
She has struggled for a year against leftist rival Bernie Sanders. The 74-year-old ran an unlikely grassroots campaign that swelled to a 12-million-strong movement.
Clinton finally clinched the nomination just days ago, prompting Obama to offer his backing.
“I don’t think there’s ever been someone so qualified to hold this office,” Obama said.
The 44th president’s backing gives Clinton a potent surrogate on the campaign trail.
‘There’s never been someone so qualified to hold this office’: Obama
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Ex-presidents George W. Bush and Bill Clinton were so toxic by their eighth year in office that would-be successors kept them at arm’s length.
By contrast, Obama is still one of the country’s most popular politicians.
His approval ratings among black, Hispanic, young and liberal voters are stratospheric.
Clinton welcomed the vote of confidence: she tweeted, echoing one of Obama’s own campaign rallying cries from 2008:
In that election, Obama bested Clinton to become the first black president. They later made peace, as Clinton became Obama’s first secretary of state.
Now the 68-year-old Clinton is trying to make history of her own by becoming the first female president.
Standing in her way is bombastic businessman Donald Trump. He has shocked the world by becoming the presumptive Republican presidential nominee.
Announcing the endorsement to his followers on Twitter, he said:
‘Fascist threat’
Trump’s racially tinged rhetoric has split the Grand Old Party. A growing number of Republicans say they will not vote for him.
But “The Donald” appears to be uniting Democrats.
“We must come together to confront the fascist threat to our democracy presented by Donald Trump” said Martin O’Malley, who had sought the Democratic nomination and on Thursday also endorsed Clinton.
Senator Elizabeth Warren, a darling of the left who had been pressed by supporters to mount her own White House bid, and who has since been discussed as a possible vice presidential pick, rounded out the high-profile Democratic endorsements.
“I am ready to get in this fight and work my heart out for Hillary Clinton,” the liberal stalwart told MSNBC, “and to make sure that Donald Trump never gets any place close to the white house.
The timing of Obama’s announcement appeared designed to push the process forward.
It came just an hour after he hosted Sanders in the Oval Office. Sanders has pointedly refused to bow out.
The two men strode along the West Wing colonnade laughing, a very public show of respect for Sanders’ insurgent bid.
Sanders “has run an incredible campaign,” Obama said, offering praise for raising issues like campaign finance reform.
The septuagenarian emerged from the White House vowing to continue his fight into next week — but also saying he would meet Clinton soon to find ways to work together.
Later in the day Sanders held a rally in the capital Washington, which hosts the final primary of the season Tuesday.
“We have shown the world that you can run a winning national campaign without being dependent on Wall Street, drug companies or big money interests,” Sanders told a crowd outside a stadium where he touched on his many campaign themes including alleviating income inequality and racial injustice.
“Thank you Bernie! Thank you Bernie!” the crowd chanted.
Some Sanders supporters would like him to battle all the way to the party convention in Philadelphia next month. For weeks he has pledged to do so, but it was notable that in Thursday’s hour-long speech he made no mention of it.
For many, Clinton — a former first lady, secretary of state and US senator — is the epitome of a political establishment that has failed the people.
More pragmatic Sanderistas are pressing him to leverage his new-found political clout to shift the party to the left.
They would like to see the party platform overhauled and reforms to the next nominating process in 2020 — opening primaries to independent voters and curbing the role of bigwig “superdelegates.” Reports by AFP,
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