Sen. Amy Klobuchar, the newest Democratic superdelegate to back the presidential candidacy of Barack Obama, nonetheless doesn't think Hillary Rodham Clinton should drop out of the race.
"I believe Senator Clinton has every right to continue her campaign," Klobuchar said Monday during a conference call with reporters. "She should continue."
But Klobuchar remained mum Monday on an endorsement in Minnesota's U.S. Senate race, where DFL front-runner Al Franken continues to face a vigorous challenge from Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer, a University of St. Thomas professor and former congressional candidate.
While acknowledging that the time had come to make a pick in the fiercely contested presidential race, Klobuchar said she would not endorse in the Senate race until after the party's June endorsing convention.
"It's a different thing," she said Monday. "I always said I would [endorse] in the summer."
As the Democrats' presidential campaign remains frozen in a delegate stalemate, the party's superdelegates have begun migrating to the Illinois senator.
Klobuchar became the ninth of Minnesota's 14 superdelegates to back Obama's bid.
In doing so, the freshman Democrat rethought her original plan to remain neutral in the race.