President Barack Obama poised to endorse Hillary Clinton
President Barack Obama edged closer to a formal endorsement of Hillary Clinton as the Democratic presidential nominee today, suggesting the next 48 hours would be pivotal.
With
a series primary votes on Tuesday that could see Clinton all but seal
the party nomination, the White House refused to rule out an endorsement
within days.
"Once
the voters in New Jersey and California have an opportunity to express
their preference," said White House spokesman Josh Earnest, "then we may
be in a position where we have a much greater sense of what the outcome
is likely to be."
It is an open secret in Washington that President Barack Obama intends to endorse Clinton.
But
the White House has publicly been wary of putting Obama's hand on the
scale during a surprisingly long and sometimes bitter primary race
against leftist Bernie Sanders.
White
House officials have been wary about alienating millions of young
voters who have flocked to Sanders' strident campaign, which has given
voice to popular anger about income inequality.
"I think the Sanders campaign would agree that the President has worked hard and gone to great lengths to be fair," said Earnest.
But
he added: "The President does have a long personal relationship with
Secretary Clinton, she served as his secretary of state for more than
four years."
Sanders, a 74-year-old senator from Vermont who was an independent until recently, has won 10 million votes during the primaries, three million fewer than Clinton.

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