Obama Endorsed by Pennsylvania Sen. Casey
Barack Obama receives the endorsement of Pennsylvania Sen. Bob Casey in Pittsburgh, Pa., Friday. (AP Photo)
PITTSBURGH — Pennsylvania Sen. Bob Casey endorsed Democrat Barack Obama on Friday, a move that could help the presidential candidate make inroads with white working-class voters dubbed “Casey Democrats” in the Keystone State.
Appearing on stage beside the Illinois senator, Casey told a boisterous rally, “I believe in my heart that there is one person who’s uniquely qualified to lead us in that new direction and that is Barack Obama.”
Pennsylvania’s April 22 primary will allocate 158 delegates, the biggest single prize left in the drawn-out nomination battle between Obama and Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York. Clinton is leading Obama in the state, by 12 points in one poll this month.
Casey is a first-term senator and the son of a popular former governor of the state. Casey is Catholic and, like his father, is known for his opposition to abortion and support of gun rights. His support could help Obama make inroads among Catholic voters, who have preferred Clinton to Obama in earlier primaries and strongly favor her in Pennsylvania polls.
“I really believe that in a time of danger around the world and in division here at home, Barack Obama can lead us, he can heal us, he can help rebuild America,” he said.
Obama told the crowd that he had not pushed Casey hard for an endorsement.
“Bob is such a gracious person and such a thoughtful person that I did not press him on this endorsement,” especially since Obama trails Clinton in Pennsylvania polls.
“It would have been easy for Bob just to stay out of it, just to stay neutral, I think everybody would have accepted that,” Obama said.
Casey said that he called Clinton Thursday night to tell her of his decision.
“She was very gracious. We know that she’s a great senator, she’s a great leader,” Casey said.
Asked by Casey’s endorsement, Clinton spokesman Mo Elleithee said, “We’re proud of the support we have from across Pennsylvania, including Gov. (Ed) Rendell, several members of Congress and mayors from across the state. We look forward to having his support in the general election as Democrats unite to beat John McCain and to turn our country around.”
Clinton’s backers in the state include Rep. John Murtha, who was an early advocate of withdrawing from Iraq, and Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter, who is black.
Meantime, a leading Obama backer, Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., has said Clinton should abandon her White House run.
“There is no way that Sen. Clinton is going to win enough delegates to get the nomination,” Leahy told Vermont Public Radio in an interview Wednesday. “She ought to withdraw and she ought to be backing Sen. Obama. Now, obviously that’s a decision that only she can make. Frankly, I feel that she would have a tremendous career in the Senate.”
Leahy, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, endorsed Obama in January.
The Casey endorsement came as Obama began a six-day campaign swing through Pennsylvania.
Pennsylvania has an estimated 3.8 million Catholics, or just over 30 percent of the state’s population, and the percentage among Democrats is estimated to be slightly higher.
Obama’s team hopes that Casey will help narrow Clinton’s huge lead among white working-class voters — men in particular. Clinton routed Obama among that demographic in Ohio and Texas on March 4, raising questions about his electability in November. In recent weeks, Obama has stressed economic issues important to the middle class, and he is outspending Clinton on television advertising that features blue-collar imagery.
Clinton and her supporters have been making their own direct appeals: backers Kathleen Kennedy Townsend and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., last week wrote a letter to Pennsylvania Catholics emphasizing her plans on health care, mortgage foreclosures and fuel costs. Clinton has been endorsed by Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell, giving her access to his potent political operation.
Obama has lacked a major endorsement by a statewide Pennsylvania politician, and Casey’s could help jump-start his Pennsylvania campaign. Casey has close ties to organized labor, which has been divided in Pennsylvania between the two candidates.
Casey had a 62 percent approval rating among Democrats in a recent Quinnipiac University poll.
Casey’s move could also be seen as a political jab at the Clintons. Bill Clinton was the Democrats’ presidential nominee in 1992 when Casey’s father was not given a prime-time speaking position at the party’s convention, which outraged many of the state’s conservative Democrats.
Casey was to campaign with Obama as he travels across Pennsylvania by bus.
The bus tour will feature “listening sessions,” a technique Clinton used in her 2000 Senate campaign to convince skeptical New Yorkers that she was not just a carpetbagger looking for a plum post after leaving the White House.
Obama hopes to prevent Clinton from racking up a large win in the state which could eat away at his delegate advantage and give her new life in the final primaries running to June.
It may be a tough sell for some in the state, which has a sizable elderly population. In the previous primaries, older Democrats have favored Clinton, while younger voters tend toward Obama.
Casey served two four-year terms as state auditor general. He lost a 2002 gubernatorial bid in the Democratic primary to Rendell.
Casey was elected to the Senate in 2006, defeating conservative GOP incumbent Rick Santorum. Obama campaigned for Casey, but so did Clinton and her husband.





Americans wake-up! Obama spent 20 years with anti-American racists. He made one of them his mentor and advisor. Granted, he’s a great speaker, but any fool knows that ‘actions speak louder than words’. Once you hand the keys to the kingdom over to this guy … it will be too late.
What are you thinking??? Well at least you are a true Democrat. Unlike Spector who claims to be Republican and acts like a Democrat. Did have me fooled though !
This is soooooo great. The way the democrats one bloodying each other is wonderful. Now, the entire world gets a needed lesson on what the left has in store and the hypocrisy they exude.
“ABC” - Anybody But Clinton
Sen. Casey,
What you are doing is endorsing the right for pro-choice. I am embarrassed as a Catholic
I am so glad to see the support around Mr. Obama. From listening to the media, I thought Clinton had captured the entire state and everyone in it! The Hill-Billys will undermine, manipulate and perform ‘defamation surgery’ on Mr. Obama. They are of the mindset “if I (we) can’t get it, we’ll make sure you don’t either”. We cannot let this happen! There is a 23rd Amendment for a reason… No third term for Bill!!! GObama ’08.
Hillary mispoke (lied) and it was said to be because she is tired. At 3:00 am, if the phone rings and she is tired, will she misspeak (lie) again??? How are we to know if she isn’t “always” tired and misspeaking (lying)?
Also I would say, to judge Mr. Obama on HIS WORDS & HIS ACTIONS, not someone else’s. Remember that you can’t even control what your own child will say in public. Right?
Thank you Gov. Casey!
Thank you Fox News for reporting this story - fair and balanced indeed!
I have been awake for some time now. This is NOT a joke now. The media is NOT scared of this guy. Is FOX News scared” I think not. APPEALING !
Who really cares!!! You folks need to get a life, you really do. : ) : )
Some of these “Endorsements” are too odd to be real. Richardson almost seemed to be sending a “silent hostage” message as did some of the other earlier “endorsements.”
Wonder what they’ve been “promised”
I think that this endorsement will only help Obama continue to receive support from Pennsylvanians who normally would not have voted for him. This and other endorsements sends a strong message that Americans are ready for change. I just hope that Hillary will soon recognize that many see her as another old school democrat that will continue to use the good ol’ boy method of thinking if she were elected President.
Bob Casey should review Mr. Obama’s Christian for convenience program. He should also consider his party’s position on abortion. Then I think he should wash his hands of Obama.