“Pull the lever for Hillary!” Clinton declared outside, showing support for the former secretary state as she attempts to squeeze out a victory over rival Senator Bernie Sanders in the Bay State’s primary.

A crowd of about 200 had assembled outside the Newton Free Library when the former president pulled up at about 10:45 a.m. in a caravan of police cars and Secret Service vehicles and stepped out of a cream-colored sport utility vehicle.

Former president Bill Clinton’s star power was on full display on Super Tuesday as he appeared in Boston, Newton, and New Bedford to stump for his wife, Hillary Clinton, while voters around Massachusetts cast their ballots in the presidential primary.


“Oh my God! It’s Hillary’s husband!” one man cried out as Bill waded through the crowd, shaking hands, kissing babies, and stopping to have conversations with voters.

“This is phenomenal,” said Rosalie Weener of Brookline. “Honestly, I’ve had dreams of meeting them and now I’ve met them both. I was phone banking for Hillary last night and I’ve met her, and now I’ve met him.”

Hillary Clinton and fellow Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders are close in the polls and in a statistical dead heat according to one.

Earlier Tuesday, the ex-president and Boston Mayor Marty Walsh appeared together at a polling place in the city’s West Roxbury neighborhood, where they greeted voters and school children.

Walsh said the GOP candidates for president are ‘‘an embarrassment to the office’’ after voting for Hillary Clinton near his Dorchester home.

After leaving Newton, Clinton headed to Buttonwood Park in New Bedford where about 1,000 people awaited him, according to police estimates, and he was introduced by Mayor Jon Mitchell.

“Thank you all for participating,” Clinton told the crowd, in a video posted on SouthCoastToday. “I especially thank those of you who support Hillary, but we ought to give the others a round of applause too.”


Clinton said Massachusetts had been “very, very good” to his family and that the Clintons had been “pretty good” to the Bay State.

“We can all rise together again,” he said. “Hillary says the way to do it is to build ladders of opportunity, and get rid of the barriers — economic and non-economic — so we can all climb ladders and rise together.”

Mitchell said Hillary Clinton is “very familiar with this place,” having come to New Bedford during the 1970s to do research for the Children’s Defense Fund on legislation requiring schools to widen acceptance of disabled students.

“We got the word out just yesterday about this, and look at the crowd,” Mitchell said. “New Bedford is very important to any Democrat in a statewide race. You need the turnout here.”

Among those in attendance was Diana Painter of Fair Haven, who wore a button supporting Sanders. “I came because I’m a Democrat first and a Bernie supporter second, and I wanted to be here because I want to be supportive of Hillary just in case,” she said.

A 94-year-old woman on her way to vote at the nearby polling place said she had missed Clinton’s appearance by minutes. “I am here and I am going to stay healthy to keep voting for Hillary,” she said.

Bill Clinton posed with supporters in Newton. Lane Turner/globe staff/Globe Staff

Below are scenes of Clinton’s appearance in Boston: