Advertisement

Obama considers Clinton role in campaign

Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY) (L), pictured in Louisville, Kentucky on May 20, 2008, and Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), pictured in Las Vegas on May 27, 2008, continue to battle for the party's nomination on the day of the last primary votes in Montana and South Dakota, June 3, 2008. Clinton's press office reports that she will not concede the nomination to Obama tonight, citing that Obama does not yet have the numbers to clinch the nomination. Several media reports assert that Obama does have enough delegates to win the nomination. (UPI Photos/Mark Cowan/Daniel Gluskoter)
Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY) (L), pictured in Louisville, Kentucky on May 20, 2008, and Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL), pictured in Las Vegas on May 27, 2008, continue to battle for the party's nomination on the day of the last primary votes in Montana and South Dakota, June 3, 2008. Clinton's press office reports that she will not concede the nomination to Obama tonight, citing that Obama does not yet have the numbers to clinch the nomination. Several media reports assert that Obama does have enough delegates to win the nomination. (UPI Photos/Mark Cowan/Daniel Gluskoter) | License Photo

WASHINGTON, June 4 (UPI) -- While Barack Obama wants to focus on the U.S. presidential election, his advisers say they know they must first consider Hillary Clinton and her supporters.

Clinton let it be known she would be open to being his running mate before primaries in Montana and South Dakota ended Tuesday. Obama received enough delegate support to clinch the Democratic presidential nomination.

Advertisement

Clinton, speaking from her home state of New York Tuesday night, said she wasn't making any decisions for a few days. Obama's campaign said the freshman senator from Illinois wants to talk to Clinton soon.

An Obama-Clinton ticket has advantages, observers told The New York Times, such as repairing relations among Clinton's supporters, especially women. Clinton also would provide Obama with foreign policy credentials, a list of contributors and the potential to put more states into play.

"I think the world of both of them," said Sen. Thomas Carper, D-Del. "I want to see them run as a team."

Others caution about Obama selecting Clinton as a running mate, especially so soon after the primary season has ended. He wouldn't want to appear to be pressured into the decision, the Times said.

Advertisement

"It's backward-looking to pick a Clinton at this point -- and he's all about forward-looking, to being about change," said Matt Bennett, co-founder of Third Way, a moderate Democratic organization. "He's all about a fundamentally new kind of politics. Picking a Clinton is, by definition, backward-looking, and I just don't think he wants that."

Latest Headlines