Sen. Bob Casey of Pennsylvania has endorsed Barack Obama today for the Democratic nomination for president.
“The endorsement comes as something of a surprise,” Dan Pfeiffer, Obama communications director, said in a statement. “Casey … had been adamant about remaining neutral until after the April 22 primary. He said he wanted to help unify the party.“
Obama strategists hope Casey can help Obama make inroads with the conservative, white working-class men who are often referred to as ‘Casey Democrats.’
“There are few stronger advocates for working families in Pennsylvania than Sen. Casey,” Pfeiffer said.
Casey, who is also a superdelegate, will actively tour and campaign with Obama. His endorsement brings to 12 the number of U.S. senators backing Obama, compared with 13 for Clinton.
Casey is impressed with how Obama has handled his campaign, and how he sacrificed at the beginning of his career to be a community organizer “in the shadows of the closed steel mills in Chicago,” said a source close to Casey.
Hillary Clinton currently has the lead in Pennsylvania, and has the endorsement of the state’s governor, Ed Rendell, and Philadelphia mayor, Michael Nutter.
Clinton is poised to win the state, but a strong showing by Obama would keep his accumulated lead in delegates and in the popular vote intact.
SOURCE: Pennsylvania’s Bob Casey Will Endorse Obama, Tour With Campaign