Jim Clyburn endorsing Obama
Moore, reached later in the day, said he'd support whomever Clyburn and Spratt pick.
"It's really hard to turn the congressman down when something will help the state of South Carolina," Moore said of Clyburn's lobbying.
Spratt spokesman Chuck Fant said his boss wasn't talking about an endorsement for now and wouldn't confirm Clyburn's calls to back Obama or word that Spratt and Clyburn would make a joint announcement Tuesday. Spratt previously has said he'd do as his House district did in the primary, which handily backed Obama.
Fowler said he respects Clyburn but does "not plan to change my candidate affiliation tomorrow." He said he would back Obama only if Clinton doesn't get the nomination.
Earlier in the campaign, Clyburn explained his lack of endorsement on several fronts: it was a tool to get the first-in-the-South primary and snare the state three debates; House leadership was staying out of the race until the end of the race, and other states needed to hold their contests first.
But he also used his endorsement to try to keep candidates in line. During the heated South Carolina primary, Clyburn publicly urged Bill Clinton to "chill a little bit" and after the election told The New York Times that the former president had offended black voters as he campaigned for his wife. Bill Clinton at one point compared Obama's predicted win to Jesse Jackson's 1988 victory in South Carolina, and supporters of the Illinois senator considered it a slight.
Reader Comments