Bernie Sanders won 22 states and scored a two-hour meeting with Hillary Clinton about Democratic priorities – but he's not being vetted as a vice presidential running mate, according to people familiar with the process.

However liberal firebrand Massachusetts senator Elizabeth Warren is being considered, the Wall Street Journal reported.

The vetting isn't to the point where candidates must hand over answers to an intrusive questionnaire and fill out detailed financial information and any dirt from their past.

Staff for Clinton's campaign are beginning the search by going over publicly available information as they weigh who could do the most good on the ticket, is up to the job, knows to attack Donald Trump – and won't embarrass the campaign with their own scandals.

Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren is on Clinton's list of potential running mates, and checked off an important box last week when she endorsed Hillary

Clnton dodged when asked on Telemundo whether she would consider running with Sanders –saying there are 'a lot' of qualified candidates.

“I haven’t even begun to sort all that out,' she told the Spanish-language network. 'There are a lot of really qualified, dynamic candidates I’m sure to be considered for vice president.”

Other names that the paper put on the list, sourced anonymously to people who know about the process, include housing secretary Julian Castro, Sen. Tim Kaine of Virginia, and Sens. Sherrod Brown of Ohio and Cory Booker of New Jersey.

Also listed were labor secretary Tom Perez, L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti, Rep. Xavier Becerra of California and Rep. Tim Ryan of Ohio.

The Clinton camp on Thursday sent out a press statement from Castro, who used to be mayor of San Antonio, blasting Donald Trump, who is campaigning in Texas this week.

“Donald Trump's message to the Latino community is clear: You are not American. In Trump's America, Latinos wouldn't be welcome, our LGBT brothers and sisters wouldn't be able to marry who they love, and Americans would be discriminated against because of their religion,' Castro said in the statement.

Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders won 22 states but is reportedly not being vetted. He has yet to endorse Clinton, and is still trying to force changes in the party platform

'In a time where the Latino community is under attack, we need a leader who will be a partner, not someone who treats Latinos like second class citizens. We need a leader who will break down barriers for us, not build a wall. We need a leader who will strive for inclusion, not division.'

He continued: 'For this and so many other reasons, Donald Trump has proven once again that he’s not qualified and he’s temperamentally unfit to be President. As Trump visits Texas over the next few days, let it be clear that his hateful rhetoric is not welcome in our community. Let it be clear that we will raise our voices against him in November.”

Warren also has been publicly trying out her role as an attack dog, lacing into Trump in Senate speeches and tweets. Last week she tore into Trump as a 'loud, nasty, thin-skinned fraud,' then finally endorsed Clinton on MSNBC Friday.

Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta, who served as chief of staff to Bill Clinton and President Obama, is heading the search along with longtime Clinton counselor Cheryl Mills, who recently testified in a lawsuit related to the Clinton email scandal.

Virginia Senator Tim Kaine is able to speak Spanish

Housing Secretary Julian Castro but out a blistering statement hitting Donald Trump, saying Latino's wouldn't be 'welcome' under Trump

The Clinton camp sent out a missive by Castro Thursday

Labor secretary Tom Perez is also on Clinton's list

Senator Sherrod Brown represents a key battleground state and has been pushing for labor and environmental concessions in trade agreements for years

Representative Xavier Becerra is a member of the House Democratic leadership

Representative Tim Ryan has proposed legislation to let companies petition to get duties from China. his inclusion on the list sends a signal about trade

Sanders has yet to endorse Clinton, even after losing the final primary in D.C. He met with her for two hours Tuesday night to begin talks of negotiating over the platform. The independent socialist who caucuses with Democrats called for a 'fundamental transformation' of the Democratic Party.

"We need a party which is prepared to stand up for the disappearing middle class, for the 47 million people in this country who are living in poverty, and take on the greed of the powerful special interests that are doing so much harm to this country, who have so much power over the political and economic life of our country," Sanders said this week.

Clinton, who suffers from high disapproval ratings, is anxious to find a way to mollify Sanders' younger, more progressive supporters.

The Huffington Post reported citing sources that Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid now wants Clinton to pick Warren. Earlier, Reid said his position on the idea was 'hell no,' because it could temporarily cost Democrats a Senate seat.