Bernie Sanders finally endorsed Hillary Clinton 

News Hour:

After months of bitter campaigning, Bernie Sanders finally endorsed presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton on Tuesday, pledging to work tirelessly to help his former rival defeat Donald Trump and win the White House, reports BSS.

The joint appearance in Portsmouth, New Hampshire — their first — was the culmination of weeks of talks between the two campaigns aimed at unifying the party to most effectively take on Republican opponent Trump in November.

“Secretary Clinton has won the Democratic nominating process, and I congratulate her for that,” Sanders, 74, told a cheering crowd, with Clinton at his side.

Sanders pledges to support Clinton

Sanders pledges to support Clinton

“She will be the Democratic nominee for president and I intend to do everything I can to make certain she will be the next president of the United States.”

The US senator from Vermont offered voters a litany of reasons why the 68-year-old former secretary of state is a better choice than the 70-year-old Manhattan real estate mogul.

“If anyone out there thinks that this election is not important, take a moment to think about the Supreme Court justices that Donald Trump will nominate, and what that means to civil liberties, equal rights and the future of our country,” Sanders said.

Putting aside the acrimony, Clinton thanked Sanders for his endorsement — even if their body language did not exude warmth and was downright awkward at times.

“I am proud to be fighting alongside you,” she said. “We are stronger together.”

‘MOST PROGRESSIVE PLATFORM’

Sanders waged a tougher-than-expected, yearlong battle against Clinton, but in early June she clinched enough delegates to secure the nomination.

The feisty, self-described democratic socialist nevertheless had refused to concede defeat to his more moderate rival until now.

Sanders wants to ensure that his ideas are part of the party platform presented at the Democratic National Convention later this month in Philadelphia, when Clinton is due to be formally nominated.

Sanders said that at weekend talks in Orlando, “there was a significant coming together between the two campaigns and we produced, by far, the most progressive platform in the history of the Democratic Party.”

PENCE AS TRUMP’S VP?

Trump, who has proclaimed himself “the law and order candidate” amid rising gun violence, unleashed a barrage of criticism, saying Sanders “abandoned” his grassroots supporters by joining forces with Clinton.

“I want to tell you, a lot of Bernie Sanders people are so upset about it, they are going to be voting for Trump,” he said in Westfield, Indiana.

The Republican billionaire campaigned there with Governor Mike Pence, raising speculation that he could pick Indiana’s chief executive as runningmate.

Trump told The New York Times he expected to make an announcement by Friday, three days before the Republican convention in Cleveland, where he will officially become the nominee. He called Pence a “good man” during his unscripted remarks, but also teased the crowd.

“I don’t know whether he’s going to be your governor or your vice president. Who the hell knows?” Trump said to raucous cheers.

Trump had hit the campaign trail Monday in Virginia Beach with New Jersey Governor Chris Christie — one of those on the vice presidential shortlist.

Christie’s experience running a populous state could be seen as critical for Trump, who has acknowledged his own lack of political and government expertise.

Pence also brings executive experience, and the salt-of-the-earth Midwesterner has shown a steady hand that could help counter the narrative that Trump is too incendiary and quick to provoke.

Pence is a 12-year veteran of Congress, well versed in international affairs from his time on the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

Former House speaker Newt Gingrich, who ran for president in 2012, is also in the running mate mix. He said he expected Trump would announce his pick on Wednesday or Thursday.

“Certainly no later than Friday, because they’re going to want to dominate the weekend news with the vice presidential selection,” Gingrinch told reporters.

Trump’s Indiana appearance was his first speech without a teleprompter since deadly violence last week plunged the nation into racial angst.

“Our whole nation grieves and mourns for the loss of five heroes in Dallas,” Trump said, choosing his words carefully.

But he also stressed that “the hostility against our police has to end.”

“We have to stay together, and we have to be strong,” he added.

Hours earlier, Trump reportedly declined to speak at the upcoming conference of the NAACP, snubbing the nation’s largest African American civil rights group for an engagement that would have taken place just as the Republican convention kicked off.

“You cannot run for president and skip the opportunity speak on the nation’s civil rights agenda,” the NAACP posted on Twitter.

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