Obama hopeful Sanders will wind up campaign within a ‘couple of weeks’

LOS ANGELES, CA - JUNE 08: Democratic presidential candidate Senator Bernie Sanders (D-VT) prepares to board a flight from Los Angeles back to Vermont on June 8, 2016 in Los Angeles, California. During a rally in Santa Monica last night Sanders vowed to continue his campaign into the convention.   Scott Olson/Getty Images/AFP
LOS ANGELES, CA – JUNE 08: Democratic presidential candidate Senator Bernie Sanders (D-VT) prepares to board a flight from Los Angeles back to Vermont on June 8, 2016 in Los Angeles, California. During a rally in Santa Monica last night Sanders vowed to continue his campaign into the convention. Scott Olson/Getty Images/AFP

WASHINGTON, United States (AFP) — Barack Obama expressed hope Wednesday that Bernie Sanders in “the next couple of weeks” will finally concede having lost the Democratic presidential nomination to Hillary Clinton, despite having vowed to fight on through the party’s convention next month.

Appearing Wednesday on the “Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon,” Obama said that on balance, Sanders’s candidacy in the hardfought Democratic campaign was a positive.

“It was a healthy thing for the Democratic Party to have a contested primary,” Obama told Fallon.

“I thought that Bernie Sanders brought enormous energy and new ideas. And he pushed the party and challenged them. I thought it made Hillary a better candidate.”

He added: “My hope is, is that over the next couple of weeks, we’re able to pull things together.”

The US president made his remarks one day after Clinton prevailed in four of six primary and caucus election contests, and declared herself to be her party’s indisputed flagbearer for the November presidential election.

Sanders has refused to concede defeat, and vowed to “continue the fight” for the nomination.

Obama, however, has a meeting planned with Sanders on Thursday, at which he is expected to urge him to formally wrap up his campaign so that the divided party can reconcile and focus its energies on defeating Republican Donald Trump.

He has yet, so far, to make a formal endorsement in the presidential race, although it is widely believed that his sympathies lie with Clinton, his former secretary of state, whom he vanquished in the battle for the Democratic nomination in 2008.

“I’m going to be talking to (Sanders) tomorrow. He’s going to be coming to the White House,” Obama said, adding that the thrust of his message going forward is not just for the Vermont senator, but for America as a whole.

“The main role I’m going to be playing in this process is to remind the American people that this is a serious job,” Obama said,

“I’ve seen the decisions that have to be made. And the work that has to be done. And I have a lot of confidence that if the American people are reminded of what’s at stake and all the incredible important issues that we’ve got to get right, that they’re going to make a good choice. That’s what they usually do.”

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