Officials From Obama’s Cabinet Line Up To Endorse Clinton

FILE - In this Dec. 4, 2015, file photo, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and Labor Secretary Tom Perez, right, meet members of the audience following a Clinton campaign stop in Sioux City, Iowa. Cli... FILE - In this Dec. 4, 2015, file photo, Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and Labor Secretary Tom Perez, right, meet members of the audience following a Clinton campaign stop in Sioux City, Iowa. Clinton hasn’t just been wrapping herself in President Barack Obama’s legacy lately. She’s been wrapping herself in his Cabinet. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik, File) MORE LESS
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WASHINGTON (AP) — Hillary Clinton hasn’t just been wrapping herself in President Barack Obama’s legacy lately. She’s been wrapping herself in his Cabinet.

With Obama’s endorsement out of reach for now, Clinton’s presidential campaign has racked up support from his administration’s top officials. It’s part of the effort to win over loyalists in the Obama coalition as Clinton — secretary of state in his first term — fights for every edge.

Obama’s housing chief, Julian Castro, campaigned for Clinton this weekend in Nevada and Iowa. Clinton recently accepted the endorsement of Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx and appeared in South Carolina with former Attorney General Eric Holder. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, a former Iowa governor, and Labor Secretary Tom Perez also are among the current and former officials who have publicly declared their support.

The high-level endorsements come as Clinton tries to undercut her main rival, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, by casting him as fair-weather friend to her former boss. She has called out Sanders for suggesting in 2011 that Obama should face a second-term primary challenge, and for criticizing Obama for taking donations from Wall Street.

Sanders’ campaign has embraced the outsider status.

“We’re proud of the endorsements we’ve gotten from millions of Americans who are supporting Bernie in taking on the rigged economy and the corrupt campaign finance system that props it up,” campaign manager Jeff Weaver said.

Obama administration officials are hardly the flashiest of endorsements, and his Cabinet hasn’t produced lots of household names. Clinton was the most recognizable.

But each helps reach some important group — African Americans, Latinos, labor, Iowans — and Clinton need every bit of electoral help she can get.

“You’re happy to have them all,” said Democratic strategist Bob Shrum. “They each have a marginal impact, but a marginal impact matters when you’re weeks before Iowa.”

The officials have their own motivations for signing on early.

Castro, a 41-year-old former San Antonio mayor, hasn’t shot down speculation that he could find himself on the ticket with Clinton. His turns on the campaign trail could prove to be something of an audition.

“There are rumors you’re in vice president training camp,” Stephen Colbert asked Castro, when Castro was on the “The Late Show.” ”What does that involve other than staying awake behind someone giving the State of the Union address?”

Castro laughed, but didn’t dispel the rumors.

Like other Cabinet members, Castro has reached out to targeted audiences. He announced his support to a largely Latino crowd at a San Antonio rally in October. Clinton said she would “look hard” at Castro as a running mate.

Obama has said he will not endorse during the primary, and he and his aides are treading carefully.

White House officials say they have not offered any formal guidance to Cabinet members who have decided to wade into the race before the boss, only that they give the White House a courtesy heads up before they go public with their support.

The standing restrictions on political activity apply. Officials are told not to trade on their office for political purposes or use their official titles at events. Staff time and government money cannot be used for travel or planning. Officials can’t ask for money. They can speak at fundraisers.

But there’s no prohibition on reminding people who you work for and why your support matters.

“As someone who has had a front row seat, I sure as hell don’t want to see the progress we made go backward,” Perez said during a visit to a Las Vegas union office for some phone-banking in December. “And that’s why, folks, I’m going to say I’m proud as hell of the fact that I have had the privilege of working for Barack Obama and I’m proud as hell to endorse Hillary Clinton to be the next president of the United States.”

Not all past candidates have wanted surrogates linking them so closely to the current occupant of the White House.

Vice President Al Gore relied on several current and former Cabinet secretaries in 2000 to serve as advisers as well as critics of his opponent, Republican George W. Bush. Eight years later, the campaign of Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., tried to distance itself from the two-term Bush, particularly on war policies. (McCain’s open feud with former Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld put so much distance between the men that Rumsfeld would not say whether he would vote for the GOP nominee.)

But as Clinton and Sanders compete for die-hard Democrats, association with the Obama administration remains a net plus. Obama’s support among Democratic base voters is rock solid. Ninety-one percent of African-Americans and 86 percent of Democrats say they approve of Obama’s job performance, according to Gallup.

Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  1. Avatar for mymy mymy says:

    That tells me a lot. That she worked well with them and shared the same goals. Sanders can embrace the “outsider” status all he wants, but one wonders how he would handle it if he became “the establishment”? Would he feel the same emotional anguish when he worked in offices as a young man? (The NYT sampled some of his writing from that time–how he couldn’t stand the soullessness of working in offices). Would he take the Oval Office rural?

  2. Avatar for mjv135 mjv135 says:

    I’ve never understood the tremendous appeal of ‘outsiders’. I get the whole idea of cronyism and corruption, but I don’t see how someone who has no clue how the process really works is better?
    I heard a GOP pundit say that the rise of Trump is because voters want to take a baseball bat to Washington … WTF? If my car is running like crap and won’t start, of course I get frustrated and WANT to take a baseball bat to it … but I don’t, 'cuz that would be stupid, I need my car. I take it to someone who knows how to fix it. And if they rip me off, then I find another one, and so on, until I get someone who can get me back on the road.
    I don’t take it to a bicycle mechanic and tell him to blow it up for me.

  3. Sad to see progressive groups rushing to perform “hara-kiri”. The socialist dream & novelty of Sander’s campaign is for wankers, as the MSM savage Clinton & fellate tRump.

    The Obama coalition will wither away, zero appointments to SCOTUS may rollback progressive gains, while move.org, the Nation and the likes , wallow in their own hubris.

  4. That appeal is stronger in a general election to replace an incumbent POTUS whose time is up (two terms) with someone from the other party than it is in a primary race of the incumbent’s own party.

    Actually, Bernie has more “insider” political experience as a mayor and member of Congress than Hillary has (or Obama had). He is also a more experienced political campaigner who has been through tougher general elections than Hillary, so he presumably knows how to play his strongest hand with the cards he has been dealt.

    That being said, the primary frontrunner is still Hillary, unless she misplays her leading hand. The general election is another matter, and I think the Democrats should work at it as if they were the decided underdogs.

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