President-elect Barack Obama is actively considering former rival New York Senator Hillary Clinton as secretary of state and she appears to be the frontrunner, according to a Democrat familiar with the matter.

Clinton, who waged a bitter fight against Obama for the Democratic nomination, flew to Chicago yesterday where the two met. The meeting wouldn't likely have taken place if Obama weren't going to offer Clinton the position, and she probably wouldn't have traveled to Chicago if she weren't inclined toward it, the Democrat said.

Obama has surrounded himself with about a half dozen confidantes who are an integral part of the transition decision making and who have refused to discuss internal matters publicly. The group includes Vice President-elect Joe Biden, incoming Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, the campaign's chief strategist David Axelrod, and transition leaders John Podesta, Pete Rouse and Valerie Jarrett.

Obama, who relinquishes his Senate seat on Nov. 16, said during his campaign that he would fashion a Cabinet that included Democrats, independents and Republicans. He now appears to be modeling his Cabinet in the style of Abraham Lincoln that became the subject of "Team of Rivals," a book by historian Doris Kearns Goodwin.

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Lincoln, who spent one term in Congress years before running for president, brought his opponents for the 1860 Republican nomination into his Cabinet as attorney general and secretaries of the Treasury and state.

Obama himself referred to Lincoln's inclusive leadership style at a Boca Raton town hall in May. When asked whether Obama would consider Clinton as a vice presidential running mate, Obama replied:

"My goal is to have the best possible government, and that means me winning," he said. "I'm a practical-minded guy. And, you know, one of my heroes is Abraham Lincoln."

"A while back, there was a wonderful book written by Doris Kearns Goodwin called 'Team of Rivals,' in which she talked about how Lincoln basically pulled all the people he'd been running against into his Cabinet," Obama continued. "Because whatever personal feelings there were, the issue was, 'How can we get this country through this time of crisis?' I think that has to be the approach one takes to the vice president and the Cabinet."

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