President Barack obama

President Barack Obama is casting the Democratic primary to replace him as a contest between Hillary Clinton's pragmatism and experience versus Bernie Sanders' idealism and liberalism, ABC News reported Monday.

Obama, in his most extensive assessment to date of the 2016 Democratic primary, said Clinton is "wicked smart," but that her strengths are also her weaknesses. Praising her extensive preparation for the Oval Office, Obama said Clinton's experience had taught her to "campaign more in prose than poetry."

"I think Hillary came in with both privilege and burden of being perceived as the front-runner," Obama said in an interview with Politico posted on its website Monday. "And as a consequence, you know, where they stood at the beginning probably helps to explain why the language sometimes is different."

Asked repeatedly about the 2016 race, the president was extremely cautious to avoid showing explicit favor in the Democratic race. White House officials have said Obama will not endorse in the primary, which pits his 2008 primary opponent and former secretary of state against a liberal independent senator from Vermont who many Democrats feel embodies the upstart, idealistic nature of Obama's own campaign.

Obama said there was no doubt Sanders had tapped into a "running thread" in Democratic politics that questions why people should be scared to talk bluntly about inequality and "be full-throated in our progressivism."

"You know, that has an appeal," Obama said. "And I understand that."

Source: MENA