Clinton said Obama was not getting the credit he deserves for everything he did to save the US economy and for putting the country on the "right track".
"I am so grateful for President Obama's leadership. I love it when he talks - and I'm so grateful for all of his support in this election. Both he and Michelle have been amazing on the campaign trail," Clinton said at an election rally in Philadelphia yesterday.
Clinton, 69, said Tuesday's US general election was not about any individual, but about choosing "hope over fear, unity over division and love over hate."
She laid out the stakes in the election, calling it not just a choice between two candidates but between two very different visions for the country.
"On Tuesday, we face a test of our own. This election is about much more than the two candidates. Our names may be on the ballot, but make no mistake: everything you care about, everything that I care about and I've worked for is at stake," Clinton said.
"This election is about doing everything we can to stop the movement to destroy President Obama's legacy - in fact it is about building on the gains and the progress we've made in the last eight years," she said.
"We have got to continue to take on the problem of systemic racism, to rid ourselves of deep-rooted injustice, hatred, and fear. We need end-to-end reform in our criminal justice system - with real follow through. I want us to get rid of what is called the 'school to prison pipeline' and replace it with the 'cradle to college pipeline'," she said.
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