Former President Bill Clinton has not submitted his Democratic National Convention speech to the Obama campaign for “vetting” yet, but a senior campaign official told CBS News Monday that the campaign isn’t concerned about it.

I find it strange, with all the uncertainty these days, that the dems would put so much confidence in Bill Clinton… Stay tuned as the Debt clock reaches $16 Trillion at the very moment Bill is to set deliver his highly anticipated Obama “make it or break it” speech at the DNC on Wednesday. Timing? I predict that something crazy is going to happen, what you ask? Anything is possible when you “free Billy!”

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CBS News is reporting:

“He will get his speech done when he wants to get his speech done. We’re not worried one bit,” the campaign official said.

Mr. Clinton is slated to deliver a key speech at the convention in Charlotte, N.C. on Wednesday night and formally nominate President Obama for re-election. As for whether the Obama campaign plans to review the former president’s speech before then, the campaign official told CBS News, “Someone, somewhere will probably give it a read.”

Last week’s Republican convention in Tampa, Fla., clearly illustrated what could go wrong when a featured speaker strays from the campaign message. Actor Clint Eastwood delivered an unusual speech that didn’t always align with Mitt Romney’s positions on issues. Eastwood was subject to some ridicule after addressing an empty chair during his speech, pretending to talk to Mr. Obama.

Democratic Convention 2012: complete coverage

Mr. Clinton hasn’t always stayed on message for the Obama campaign. The Obama campaign, though, said that letting Mr. Clinton’s speech go unvetted didn’t run the same risk that Republicans ran by failing to review Eastwood’s remarks.

“President Clinton and President Obama share the same vision of how to grow this economy,” the official said, pointing to an ad currently running featuring Mr. Clinton.

“President Obama has a plan to rebuild America from the ground-up — investing in innovation, education and job training. It only works if there is a strong middle class,” Clinton says in the ad. “That’s what happened when I was president. We need to keep going with his plan.”