Edwards backs Obama in race

Former US presidential candidate John Edwards has endorsed Democrat Barack Obama, giving a major boost to the Illinois senator…

Former US presidential candidate John Edwards has endorsed Democrat Barack Obama, giving a major boost to the Illinois senator's effort to unify the party behind his bid for the White House.

Mr Edwards, the 2004 vice presidential nominee, had been heavily courted by both Obama and rival Hillary Clinton.

"The reason I am here tonight is the Democratic voters in America have made their choice and so have I," Mr Edwards, who dropped out of this year's Democratic race in January, said at a rally with Mr Obama in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

"There is one man who knows in his heart that it is time to create one America, not two, and that man is Barack Obama," he said, as Obama sat on a stool behind him.

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The long-awaited endorsement helped blunt the impact of Ms Clinton's landslide 41-point win over Obama in West Virginia on Tuesday. That result barely put a dent in Mr Obama's lead in the Democratic race for the right to face Republican John McCain in November's presidential election.

Mr Obama has an almost unassailable advantage in delegates who will pick the nominee at the party's convention in August, and has turned his attention to a general election match-up with McCain for the past week.

"I have no doubt that John Edwards can be extremely helpful to us campaigning in every demographic," Obama told reporters on his plane, adding that he hoped to get Edwards' delegates, estimated to number about 18, as well.

He said Mr Edwards would "be on anybody's short list" for the vice presidency but said further comment would be premature.

Mr Obama gained the support of four more superdelegates - party officials free to back any candidate - as well as the abortion rights group NARAL Pro-Choice America on Wednesday.

Mr Edwards praised Ms Clinton's "strength and character" but said it was time for Democrats to unite against McCain. He called Obama on Tuesday night to tell him he was ready to make the endorsement, an Obama aide said.

The backing of Mr Edwards could help Mr Obama attract white working-class voters who have flocked to Ms Clinton in recent contests. The former North Carolina senator made a populist economic agenda on behalf of lower and middle income workers a centrepiece of his presidential bid, and has focused heavily on efforts to battle poverty.

Mr Obama, who would be the first black US president, won the votes of fewer than one-quarter of whites without college degrees in West Virginia, exit polls showed, similar to his showing in other states.

Mr Edwards' wife, Elizabeth, who has cancer and is a well-known political figure, did not accompany him to the Obama rally. She has not endorsed either candidate.

Ms Clinton's campaign shrugged off the endorsement.

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