Now which "he" is Walker referring to? I asked myself that, too — and found my answer in the previous sentence of that tweet. "It's now clear who the RNC delegates will vote to nominate," Walker wrote.

That means it's Trump. Walker is endorsing Trump! We did it!

Here's the thing (just in case you haven't figured it out yet): This is just about the most tepid/lamest endorsement humanly possible.

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By not even mentioning Trump's name, Walker is signaling that, yes, he is endorsing the real estate billionaire but, no, he's not happy about it.

There's a lot of history here. As I wrote way back in 2015, the rise of Trump last summer sucked all of the available oxygen out of the room for lesser-known candidates like Walker. (Yes, Walker did run for president in this election!)

Trump, as is his style, made sure to remind Walker of his supremacy while in Wisconsin back in March. "He certainly can't endorse me after what I did to him in the race, right?" Trump said of Walker in Janesville. He also hit Walker's penchant for Harley-Davidsons: "He doesn't look like a motorcycle guy to me. I'm sorry," Trump said.

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In an interview last month, Walker said "it's just sad in America that we have such poor choices right now," adding of Trump: "He's not yet the nominee. Officially that won't happen until the middle of July, and so for me, that's kind of the time frame that, in particular, I want to make sure he renounces what he says — at least in regards to [Gonzalo Curiel]." (Note: Trump has not renounced his comments about Curiel's Mexican heritage; he has said his comments were willfully misunderstood by the media.)

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Walker's "endorsement" is the latest in a string of I-guess-if-I-have-no-other-choice endorsements that Trump has won over the two months since he secured the Republican nomination on May 3. Like fellow Wisconsinite Paul Ryan, Walker clearly feels, as a Republican and a party leader, he has to be for the party's nominee. And, it's now patently obvious that all attempts to keep the nomination from Trump are doomed. Walker's options are pretty limited.

Faced with a choice between Trump, Clinton and not voting, the default choice for the likes of Ryan and Walker is Trump — albeit very guardedly. It's a delicate line they have to walk: Be enough for Trump that the Trumpites don't view you as a traitor if/when you run for president down the line, but also be far enough away from Trump so as not to own every controversial thing he says or policy he proposes.