comscore Obama endorses Hillary Clinton for president | Honolulu Star-Advertiser
Top News

Obama endorses Hillary Clinton for president

Honolulu Star-Advertiser logo
Unlimited access to premium stories for as low as $12.95 /mo.
Get It Now
  • ASSOCIATED PRESS

    President Barack Obama walked with Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., down the Colonnade of the White House in Washington today.

  • ASSOCIATED PRESS

    Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton gestured as she greeted supporters at a presidential primary election night rally, Tuesday, in New York.

WASHINGTON » President Barack Obama formally endorsed Hillary Clinton’s bid for the White House today, praising his former secretary of state’s experience and grit, and urging Democrats to unite behind her in the fight against Republicans in the fall.

“Look, I know how hard this job can be. That’s why I know Hillary will be so good at it,” Obama said in a web video circulated by the Clinton campaign. “I have seen her judgment. I have seen her toughness.”

Obama called for unity among Democrats and vowed to be an active force on the campaign trail.

As it circulated the Obama video, the Clinton campaign announced their first joint appearance on the campaign trail will be Wednesday in Green Bay, Wisconsin. The campaign said Obama and Clinton will discuss building on the progress made during his presidency “and their vision for an America that is stronger together.”

Obama’s testimonial came as the Democratic establishment piled pressure on Clinton’s primary rival, Bernie Sanders, to step aside so Democrats could focus on defeating presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump.

Sanders emerged from a meeting with Obama earlier today and inched closer in that direction. Although he stopped short of endorsing Clinton, the Vermont senator told reporters he planned to press for his agenda at the party’s July convention and would work with Clinton to defeat Trump.

“Needless to say, I am going to do everything in my power and I will work as hard as I can to make sure that Donald Trump does not become president of the United States,” he said.

Sanders, standing in the White House driveway with his wife, Jane, at his side, said he would compete in the Washington, D.C., primary on Tuesday, the party’s final contest, but noted his interest was largely in pushing for statehood.

Sanders’ remarks came after a longer-than-expected Oval Office sit-down with Obama, part of Democratic leaders intensifying effort to unite behind Clinton as the nominee of the party.

Clinton declared victory over Sanders on Tuesday, having captured the number of delegates needed to become the first female nominee from a major party.

Though Sanders has shown signs he understands the end of his race is near — he was about to layoff off about half his team — he has vowed to keep fighting, stoking concern among party leaders eager for the primary race to conclude. Still looking like a candidate, Sanders planned a rally this evening in Washington, which holds the final primary contest next week.

As he met with leaders on Capital Hill at midafternoon, Sanders ignored a reporter’s question about the president’s endorsement.

The situation has put Obama, the outgoing leader of his party, in the sensitive position of having to broker detente between Clinton and Sanders without alienating the runner-up’s supporters, many of whom are angry over what they see as the Democratic establishment’s efforts to strong-arm him out of the race. Clinton is counting on Sanders’ supporters backing her to defeat Trump.

Obama has been trying to give Sanders the courtesy of exiting the race on his own terms.

“It was a healthy thing for the Democratic Party to have a contested primary. I thought that Bernie Sanders brought enormous energy and new ideas,” Obama said Wednesday during a taped appearance on “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.” ”And he pushed the party and challenged them. I thought it made Hillary a better candidate.”

Obama had planned to use today’s meeting, which the White House emphasized was requested by Sanders, to discuss how to build on the enthusiasm he has brought to the primary, the White House said. That’s a diplomatic way of saying Obama wanted to know what Sanders wants.

Sanders also was headed to a meeting with Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, who endorsed Clinton weeks ago. The Vermont senator was to meet with Vice President Joe Biden, too.

Even some of Sanders’ staunchest supporters have started looking to Clinton. Sen. Jeff Merkley of Oregon, the one Senate Democrat to endorse Sanders, said Clinton was the nominee and offered his congratulations. And Rep. Raul Grijalva, a Sanders backer from Arizona, suggested the time to rally behind Clinton would come after the District of Columbia primary on Tuesday.

“Bernie’s going to do the right thing,” Grijalva said.

Now head-to-head in the presidential race, Clinton and Trump have one thing in common: Both are working to woo Sanders supporters. Trump has said he welcomes Sanders’ voters “with open arms” while Clinton has vowed to reach out to voters who backed her opponent in the Democratic primary.

“He has said that he’s certainly going to do everything he can to defeat Trump,” Clinton said of Sanders in an Associated Press interview. “I’m very much looking forward to working with him to do that.”

Trump, despite a string of victories this week that reaffirmed his place as the GOP nominee, was still working to convince wary Republicans that he’s presidential material. Looking ahead to an upcoming speech attacking Clinton and her husband, Trump tried to turn the page following a dust-up over his comments about a Hispanic judge’s ethnicity.

That controversy and others before it have led prominent Republicans, including House Speaker Paul Ryan, to openly chastise their party’s nominee. Yet Trump’s dominance in the GOP race is hard to overstate: He now has 1,542 delegates, including 1,447 required by party rules to vote for him at the convention. It takes just 1,237 delegates to win the Republican nomination.

Obama’s aides have said he’s itching to get off the sidelines and take on Trump. The key question is whether voters who helped elect him twice will follow his lead now that he’s not on the ballot. Democrats have yet to see that powerful coalition of minorities, young people and women reliably show up for candidates not named Obama.

“It’s going to be hard to get African-American turnout as high as Obama got it, and to get youth turnout as high as Obama got it,” said Celinda Lake, a Democratic pollster. “We have to work really hard.”

Comments (88)

By participating in online discussions you acknowledge that you have agreed to the Terms of Service. An insightful discussion of ideas and viewpoints is encouraged, but comments must be civil and in good taste, with no personal attacks. If your comments are inappropriate, you may be banned from posting. Report comments if you believe they do not follow our guidelines.

Having trouble with comments? Learn more here.

Leave a Reply

  • sanders should remain in the race through the Democrat convention. if the f.b.i. completes its criminal investigation into hiliar’s felony violations and secures indictments against hiliar, the democrats will need a plan b candidate.

        • Keoni you prefer the man who got us into 3 major conflicts, moved on erroneous intelligence, spent down an enormous surplus, and did it all the while, taking a documented and historical almost 900 vacation days, versus Obamas at 189 recorded days??? Or over four times the amount…..you should be awfully proud……effete simp.

        • @ boolakanaka..you’ve been getting your info from the main stream media aka sleaze news. I understand your anger…I’d be angry too trying to “defend the Indefensible”. Must be difficult to cope with 8 years of HOPE (for the best) & CHANGE (for the worst).

        • Keoni, that information was reported by OPM, the Wall Street Journal, the Financial Times, the Economist, hardly “sleaze news”. More telling, you never confront the fact submitted….it’s probably the reason why you have a simp intellect, and that’s being generous.

    • If there was anything to the investigation/charges it would have been known by now. Typical Repubs want costly investigations and the investigation fizzles because of innuendo not facts. Think of the Repubs in the 90s.

        • Hot off the press should the SA not cover this story– “American voters think Hillary Clinton put national security at risk by mishandling classified emails — and that she’s lying about it.

          By a 60-27 percent margin, they think she’s lying about how her emails were handled while she was secretary of state, according to the latest Fox News national poll of registered voters.

          And by 57-32 percent, voters say U.S. safety was at risk because of Clinton’s mishandling of national secrets.”

      • The FBI Director comes under the AG both of which are Presidential appointees approved by the Senate. If Hillary gets in no problem, the cover up continues. If Donald gets in its all over for Hillary and Obama. In fact it might already be over. Not ten minutes after Bernie left the Oval Office the AG shows up for a private meeting. This is just the beginning.

    • Hillary is flawed but she has millions more in votes than Bernie. Bernie is an egocentric man who, frankly, spins too much shibai for a man his age. His numbers just do not add up. Trump is beyond the pale and an embarrassment to conservatives and what is left of the Republican Party. We have to vote in Hillary just to protect ourselves and our families. I know it is sad but it is the best we have this cycle.

      • Let’s pullout all the vile things Trump has to say about almost every member of the R congress. One needs to be entirely clear, while the President can set-up a legislative agenda, it is quite another thing for it to be executed without the complicit goodwill of congress, regardless of party. But, I wouldn’t expect you to have that granular knowledge of mechanics of good governance and legislative goodwill….

        • Trump’s comments are already out. Monday should be interesting. Since you have granular knowledge of mechanics of good governance and legislative goodwill why do we have super delegates? Trump and Bernie are doing a good job of exposing the establishment and the corruption in politics. A person such as yourself can be of service if you could stop degrading everyone who disagrees with you.

        • Goodness Sarge, should I also covey my graduate and law school degrees to you? Since you exhibit intellectual sloth, I will give you the superdelegate 101 summary:superdelegate gates are not bound to represent the popular vote of a region at the Democratic National Convention; they are free to support any candidate for the nomination.

          Why and the history? In short, it was a bit of a compromise. It all goes back to the 1968 Democratic national convention.
          The McGovern-Fraser commission was officially called the “Commission on Party Structure and Delegate Selection”. They proposed a lot of changes, but of interest to us here is that they gave greater uniformity to delegate selection and voice to previously marginalized groups such as women, minorities, and young people. State conventions could also no longer select more than 10% of the total delegates from their state, and that state conventions could no longer designate ex officio delegates to the national convention. Other rules also pushed states away from caucuses and towards primaries.
          In the early 80s, many Democrats felt like the McGovern-Fraser commission had gone too far in reducing the influence of party leaders, and that their changes had weakened the Presidential campaigns of McGovern in 1972, and Jimmy Carter in 1980. The Hunt Commission was established in 1981 to address this issue. Their solution was the creation of the superdelegate, a party leader not obligated or pledged to any candidate.

      • Need to pull out the one Bubba said about BO.. Clinton is quoted as telling Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), “A few years ago, this guy (Obama) would be getting us coffee.”

        • What’s your point? I could take excepts from both Bushes about their R opponents? From MCain to Romney and visa versa……heck, almost every major R hates and has a profound disrespect for Trump—in fact, more vile and exhaustive than you will ever find on the D side. So, again, I ask you, you effete simp, what’s your point?

        • @ boolakanaka…me thinks the dems are the vile ones who always bring out the race card when they run out of substance.

        • This coming from a potential presidential nominee who just said that a Mexican judge was not capable of being fair….do you not see the irony of this Keoni? I want to ask a serious question of you–did you not finish high school, as it would explain much??

    • No you are the fool. Obamaa will take his sporty 51 percent approval rating on the road and bash the Chump. The dude can still draw a crowd and carry an audience and unlike the Chump he can talk policy and elevate the discourse to something way above the Chumps “look at me, I’m a great man” theme.

        • Talk a bout a NIGHTMARE, your boy George W, Bush had a 22 percent approval rating when he left office. Chumpsters tend to forget about the last time the Republicans ran the white house.

      • Yup They are shopping at the number one retailer in the USA and voting for the number one candidate.That’s millions of folks. When the real economy picks up under Mr Trump a few may go to Target where there are less haters.

        • Sadly, for you, every single legitimate poll, has Clinton winning the electoral college by approximately 340-350 (for ClintoN) to Trump (180-190). Unless, he can win either Califormia or NY, he has no chance at all, at that is from a strict binary level. Never going to happen, those two states represent the two most diverse states (blacks and Hispanics) and arguably the two most liberal states. It really doesn’t matter what he does elsewhere, as these two states have the most electoral college votes ….

          Sorry Charlie, math is the math is the math.

    • What is it about republicans always referring to Hillary’s clothing. It is tough being a woman which is not simplified by their rip off clothing.

        • And you need to buy a hat to conceal that dearth of intelligence. Here is a suggestion, go back and try to attempt to finish middle school– you fafa knave.

        • Naughty comment coming from a nice kid like you! Hence, my scolding, kiragirl! Don’t lower yourself to her level.

        • Boolakanaka, breath in. Breath out. Feel better now? Hope you did not choke doing it.

        • WoM, sorry but I can’t stand her. She is so. Okay, will stop criticizing her.

        • You know what they say Kira, takes a fat a$$ to know one. In any event, you will always have your marginal intelligence…..what you never got accepted at boola law (Yale Law School)??? Yup, that’s what I thought, stay in your own middling pedestrian lane.

        • Kiragirl..rumor is Kim Jong-un wants to sue Crooked hiLIARy for stealing his pantsuit originals.

        • Keonigohan – Again with the pants suit comment. Will it still be funny to you the next 50 times you write it?

          You really dislike women. Wow ….

      • Trump’s a spoiled trust fund baby. He’ll get slaughtered. He’s facing confident people in politics not the get rich quick customer he has at his Trump U.

        • When her husband got caught with his pants down, she strongly stated that you cannot believe everything the victim says. Now that she wants the votes from women, she now says that the victim needs to be believed. She is so so deceptive, it is pitiful.

        • Kiragirl,I think it is good that she stood by her husband. It is so easy to get divorce, just ask the Donald but if one is a Christian, one should be careful about jumping into divorce.

  • Folks:

    If you want FOUR (or more YEARS of Obama’ism), vote for Hil-LIAR-Y.

    In the mean time…
    husband Bill wants to be in charge of hiring White House Interns.

  • What a surprise announcement. It’s almost like Christmas will be on December 25th this year. Obama is the gift that keeps on giving and Hillary is our lump of coal.

  • Ms. Hillary Clinton isn’t even considered in my jen-ken-Po equation! Still waiting for anyone other than her or the other! Johnson is looking better as time goes by! However, if elected, within the Donald’s camp is a man with great potential to help Mr. Trump successfully navigate his presidency- his son-in-law, Jared Kushner.

    • Interesting that you would suggest that. Jared Kushner was a poor student with lousy grades. But he was admitted to Harvard after his billionaire father gave a $2.5 million donation to the University.

      Thanks, Dad!

      How, exactly, did you determine his “great potential?”.

      • Klastri, you are indeed the intellect. Consider this.
        The FBI Director and the DOJ AG are Obama appointees. If they choose to withhold evidence or otherwise squash the investigation you can count on conflict of interest attacks to deal with. If by some small miracle Trump wins the White House and he appoints a new Director and AG, I and many others assure you the investigation will take on a new life. Obama has to make sure this does not happen or he is going down with the good ship Hillary. Pagliani taking the 5th, her staff not cooperating with the IG, you as an attorney know this matter will become a focal point.

  • …..Not going to help! Obama lacks credibility when it comes to political endorsements. Look at all Democrats who lost seats in the USHOR and the US Congress in the last election. Dropping like Flies. History will reapet it’s self.
    Another 4 years of this administration? NO THANKS

  • New York hasn’t voted for a Republican presidential contender since 1984, but then again every state save one went GOP that year. Democrats have a more than 3-million-person lead in voter registration, 5.8 million to 2.7 million. President Obama won more than 63 percent of the vote in 2012, besting his 2008 total. Hillary Clinton leads Trump by around 20 points in polling.

    CNN has a blockbuster report Thursday digging into this. For example, Trump has no state-level campaign director in Ohio or Colorado, two top-shelf swing states. Across the map, Republican officials say they’re just waiting to hear on what to do from either Trump or the Republican National Committee, but so far they’re hearing very little. “I’ll say that as far as building the infrastructure of a campaign, the RNC has been doing it for many years,” Trump said at a press conference in May.

    A related and intertwined problem is Trump’s lack of fundraising. Although he once said he’d raise $1 billion, his new fundraising team—mostly constituted by the RNC, of course—is working to depress expectations, saying there’s little chance he’ll raise that much. In fact, many members told The Wall Street Journal they haven’t even done any work yet. There’s a vicious cycle at work here, which is that as donors see the Trump campaign in chaos, they’re unwilling to fork over their hard-earned cash. Why back a candidate who’s rending the Republican Party apart, doesn’t follow conservative orthodoxy, and seems to have no idea what he’s doing??????

    That seems to represent a basic misunderstanding of what campaigns do. It’s hard to imagine that Trump could replace media buys, from television to web advertising, through his simple star power and social media; using a single national portal for his message skips over the opportunity to hammer home locally important messages. And it leaves out all the other stuff that campaigns spend on, like going out and identifying prospective voters, winning them over, getting them to register, and then convincing them to vote.

  • Ignore Obama’s endorsement of Billary. Too early in the game.

    Obama received some of the Top Secret emails from Billary through her BlackBerry/private server hidden in her basement. He’s just as guilty as she is.

    Perhaps that’s why Barry Obama is rushing this before the FBI/State Dept. come out with a criminal conviction of Billary.

Click here to see our full coverage of the coronavirus outbreak. Submit your coronavirus news tip.

Be the first to know
Get web push notifications from Star-Advertiser when the next breaking story happens — it's FREE! You just need a supported web browser.
Subscribe for this feature

Scroll Up