Hillary Clinton is still playing coy about her presidential ambitions, but she nabbed her first congressional endorsement Tuesday morning, with Missouri Sen. Claire McCaskill announcing she is on board with a Clinton White House bid.
The female Democratic senator wasn’t a Clinton backer in 2008, though. In Clinton’s last try for the White House, McCaskill was an early supporter of then-Sen. Barack Obama over the potential first female commander-in-chief. But McCaskill had been touting a Clinton candidacy earlier this year, and while backing the heavy frontrunner is hardly a surprising move now for leading Democrats, McCaskill becomes one of the statement. “It’s important that we start early, building a grassroots army from the ground up, and effectively using the tools of the Internet—all things that President Obama did so successfully—so that if Hillary does decide to run, we’ll be ready to help her win.”
McCaskill especially noted the group was critical in reaching out to Obama supporters, like her, in trying to build consensus. McCaskill, a second-term senator, won re-election last year in her conservative-leaning swing state race, where she was initially the underdog but saw the race change swiftly in her favor when the GOP nominee, Todd Akin, made a fatal gaffe on whether “legitimate rape” resulted in pregnancies.









