Cory Booker said that North Carolina will be a "critical state."
Speaking to reporters after a speech at the Young Democrats convention, the mayor of Newark said that North Carolina will help Barack Obama win the nomination, but it will also be a key state in the November general election.
"I think Obama making inroads now is going to be to the benefit of the general election," he said.
Booker said that in his mind, Obama has already won the nomination, predicting he would be ahead by hundreds of delegates by the time the primary season ends, but North Carolina may be when the rest of the country sees it as well.
"North Carolina is a perfect place to add an exclamation point onto a sentence that I think has already been written," he said.
Asked about Obama's successful courting of a number of North Carolina mayors, Booker said that has proven to be a successful organizing tactic in other states.
"Mayors have a direct connection to constituents," he said. "People have the most intimate connection usually with their local politicians, so when you line up people that voters trust, obviously, that voters believe in, that voters are connecting with, it's a very great campaign operation."
He noted that even in New Jersey, where Obama lost, the campaign had significant vote tallies in cities where he had gotten the mayoral endorsement early on.