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"I've got this thing," said the politician on a secretly recorded phone call, "and it's f-ing golden. And I'm just not giving it up for f-ing nothing."

That politician, as you probably remember, was Rod Blagojevich, then the the governor of Illinois, and the thing in question was the appointment to temporarily fill the Senate seat of Barack Obama, who was headed to the White House. But Blagojevich's colorful sentiment could apply equally well to the way Bernie Sanders seems to think about his endorsement in this year's presidential race. It's golden, a precious jewel he has secured in a safe whose lock can only be sprung by one who has shown herself to be pure of heart, or at least one who has paid sufficient attention to Sanders and performed the proper rituals of supplication. Then and only then will the endorsement be presented, perhaps on a velvet pillow of deepest blue, with gold piping around the edges, all nestled in a handcrafted mahogany box. He's not giving it up for nothing.

But what Sanders may not realize is that by the time he's finally ready to hand over that endorsement, very few people are likely to care. He surely calculated that he would lose something if he endorsed Hillary Clinton too quickly, without getting something in return. But now he runs the risk of waiting too long, to the point where it no longer matters.

Appearing Sunday on CNN's State of the Union, Sanders waved away the idea that he was ready to endorse Clinton. And as for his supporters, "What we are doing is trying to say to the Clinton campaign, stand up, be bolder than you have been. And then many of those voters in fact may come on board."

It's unsurprising that there are holdouts among Sanders's supporters, even as Donald Trump's unique brand of horrifying buffoonery makes the stakes of the election clearer with each passing day. For a year now, they've been told not that their candidate is the best of a collection of reasonable options, but that they're part of a revolution against a deeply corrupt establishment, embodied in the person of Hillary Clinton. To now ask them to make a pragmatic choice in favor of Clinton almost seems like a betrayal of everything they signed up for, no matter how ghastly the alternative to a Clinton victory is.

Yet that's exactly the choice they're making-and with little help from Sanders himself. In a new Washington Post poll, the number of Sanders supporters saying they'll vote for Trump in the general election is at 8 percent, down from 20 percent just a month ago. "What's more, the 81 percent of Sanders backers who are now behind Clinton is a higher number than in any poll of 2008 Clinton backers who rallied to Obama," the Post writes.

This poll could be an anomaly; maybe it's understating the degree to which Sanders supporters are going to withhold their support from Clinton. But on the other hand, maybe Sanders supporters as a group aren't quite the doctrinaire revolutionaries we thought they were. Could it be that the passionate intensity (and, sometimes, outright douchebaggery) of a small number of Berniebros who make so much noise in social media convinced us that they were representative of Sanders supporters when they actually weren't? Might it be that your typical Sanders supporter is a liberal Democrat who was attracted to Sanders' ideas, but is also perfectly willing to vote for Clinton even if she wasn't their first choice?

And might it be that it doesn't really matter to them whether and when Bernie Sanders says the words "I endorse Hillary Clinton"?

One of the things Sanders had been holding out for was the writing of the Democratic Party platform, which he hoped would represent his views. The platform committee has finished working on the draft of the platform, and it looks to be the most progressive one the party has ever written, including calling for a repeal of the Hyde Amendment forbidding federal funds from going to abortions, a $15 an hour minimum wage, an expansion of Social Security, and the elimination of the death penalty. But because Sanders didn't get absolutely every last thing he wanted (it's almost as if somebody else won the party's primaries!), he now cites the platform as another reason he can't yet give Clinton his endorsement.

Not that too many people will actually read it (or that Clinton, if she becomes president, will be bound by it one way or the other), but I'm pretty sure that if most Sanders voters looked at the platform, they'd say, "Gee, that all sounds pretty good." Nevertheless, there will be that vocal few who say it's yet more evidence that anyone who supports Clinton is a Wall Street stooge. Liberal hero Elizabeth Warren got that reaction from an angry few when she endorsed Clinton, and I wouldn't be surprised if Sanders himself, whenever he finally does make his endorsement, will hear that he has sold out his own revolution.

But how many Sanders supporters are there who won't decide to vote for Clinton until Bernie says it's OK to do so? The number gets smaller every day. And if he waits long enough, he could find that almost none of them are still waiting with him.

This article has been updated.