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Obama and McCain both need nominee who can deliver votes

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Published Date: 17 August 2008
IT HAS fired up America. Traditionally of interest only to political anoraks, the vice-presidential selection process is creating big waves on the other side of the Atlantic.
The unprecedented interest is easily explained: this year the vice-presidential nominee needs to do serious work. Both Barack Obama and John McCain need VP nominees who will deliver electoral dividends.

"While no-one will admit it publicly, the fa
ct of the matter is the candidate or a lot of people around the candidate are asking that question, 'Who will help us get into the White House?'" said historian and speech writer Richard Norton Smith.

McCain has two mountains to climb. The first is his age. If elected, the 72-year-old senator will be the oldest first-term president ever. If President McCain died in office, or stood down after one term, then whoever he chooses as his VP candidate would then be the most powerful leader in the world.

McCain has another problem in his sometimes strained relationship with his own party. While it may be an electoral asset to have some distance from George Bush, McCain also has some difficulty connecting with heartland Republicans.

One solution, proposed by many right wing commentators, is for McCain to select a candidate who is sound on the issues that most matter to traditional Republicans; abortion, stem cell research, gay marriage. The other option would be to choose a candidate who emphasises McCain's independence in an attempt to reach out to the undecided.

Obama faces a different set of challenges. To counteract accusations that he is too young and inexperienced in foreign affairs, he might be tempted to go for an elder statesman figure, much as George W Bush's selection of Dick Cheney served to bolster his candidacy. As a black candidate Obama might be tempted to go for a VP who could deliver blue collar votes in traditionally Republican areas.

For all of these reasons the VP search, which in the past has been more about balancing geographical regions, platforms and personalities, is about raw politics this year.

The wrong choice of VP can make them more of a liability than an asset. The most famous VP turkey was Dan Quayle, selected by George Bush Snr to emphasise his connection with a new generation of Republicans but remembered now for his inability to spell 'potato(e)'. Other disasters include Geraldine Ferraro, chosen as Walter Mondale's VP candidate in 1984. Ferraro's husband was later revealed to be embroiled in a tax scandal.

To avoid such embarrassing revelations today, McCain and Obama have appointed high-powered search committees to drive the all important selection process.

Obama's team, which includes Caroline Kennedy, daughter of John F Kennedy, and McCain's, led by former counsel to Ronald Reagan, Arthur B Culvahouse Jr, are scrutinising the personal, financial, political and criminal backgrounds of favoured candidates. They are hunting for skeletons. The search for the vice-president has never been more professional, or more important.

Republican front runners

Joe Lieberman

Selecting former Democrat senator Joe Lieberman would send the message that the McCain ticket was the natural home for bipartisan, independent or undecided voters. Lieberman, 66, backed McCain over any of the Democrat hopefuls and was denounced by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi as "irresponsible" for his attacks on Obama. Lieberman stood as Al Gore's VP candidate in 2000 and for the Democrat nomination for president in 2004.

Pros: Emphasises McCain's independence and hawkish line on Iraq.

Cons: Do two independent-minded old guys on the ticket help? As a practising Jew, Lieberman does little to help McCain get Christians on side.

Tim Pawlenty

Until this summer Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty was most famous for his mullet hairstyle. Now the mullet has gone, in a move widely seen as intended to make the ambitious Republican more acceptable to the TV cameras, and to John McCain. Pawlenty is a young governor, at 47 the same age as Obama, and is part of the next generation of Republican leaders. With the Republican convention being held on his home turf this year, in Minneapolis St Paul, Pawlenty will have a national platform, and has already landed a front-page profile in the New York Times.

Pros: Young with executive experience. Looks fresh, especially with new hairdo.

Cons: No national name recognition. Could his relative youth make McCain look even older?

Mitt Romney

Mitt Romney, the multi-millionaire former governor of Massachusetts, could provide McCain with business credibility. A Mormon, Romney's religious background upset Christian conservatives, but he might be more vulnerable to the criticism that he is "Mr Layoff", turning businesses around by sacking workers. Though he won't be able to deliver liberal Massachusetts, he could help with his home state of Michigan. And, at 61, he looks presidential.

Pros: Business background and looks suitably 'presidential'.

Cons: A Mormon – which still provokes distrust in the American heartland. McCain was said to have disliked him in the primaries – but who said President and VP have to like each other?

Mike Huckabee

Mike Huckabee aimed to be the second governor of Arkansas to reach the White House after Bill Clinton. The former Baptist minister, 53 this month, lost nearly eight stone after being told by his doctor that he would be dead within a decade from type II diabetes. Huckabee has a folksy charm which could contrast well with the occasionally volcanic McCain. His Christian background could cement the shaky relationship between the senator and the evangelicals.

Pros: Christian, reassuring to the Republican heartland on hot button topics. Tested in primary season so skeletons unlikely to emerge.

Cons: Does McCain need somebody from another southern state?

And the other Republican contenders: Florida governor Charlie Crist, a long-time bachelor, made a surprise announcement this summer; he is to marry the owner of a Halloween costume company. At 52, Crist could balance the ticket. Another is Bobby Jindal, the Louisiana governor, a 36-year-old whizz kid with a reformist streak, and the only Asian Indian American governor. Other names include Tom Ridge the former secretary of homeland security, though Ridge is pro-choice. Condoleezza Rice would gain kudos for McCain for selecting a black woman. General David Petraeus has also been in the frame, though he may be seen as tying McCain too closely to one policy in Iraq.

Democrat front runners

Evan Bayh

The senator for Indiana was one of the Democrats who came out most strongly for the war in Iraq. Bayh is handsome, moderate, relatively young at 52 and the father of 12-year-old twins. Nothing about him seems likely to frighten the horses, but after a few weeks in which his name has been widely touted as an Obama nominee, there are signs that the proposed nomination is not going down well with activists. A Facebook group, "100,000 Strong Against Evan Bayh for VP", was recently launched which lambasted the Senator's stance on the war.

Pros: A key Hillary supporter whose selection could heal party wounds.

Cons: Pro-war, bland and has outraged grassroots Democrats.

Joe Biden

The senator from Delaware is chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations and one of the Democratic Party's most distinguished voices on foreign affairs. The 66-year-old competed in the primaries, but ducked out after getting a humiliating 1% in Iowa. A famously windy orator, Biden is best known in the UK for appropriating Neil Kinnock's "why am I the first Kinnock in a thousand generations to go to university" speech.

Pros: Experience, foreign policy credentials by the bucket load.

Cons: Comes from one of the smallest states in the nation. As a Washington insider, does he have the 'wow' factor?

Kathleen Sebelius

Kansas governor Kathleen Sebelius's finest hour came in May 2007 after the town of Greensburg was wiped out by a tornado. She pointed out that the state lacked the manpower to respond adequately because its National Guard resources had been rerouted to Iraq. By tying the area and international affairs together the 60-year-old delighted local Democrats and looked like a hometown champion ticking off an incompetent president. A pro-business Democrat with moderate policy positions she has championed Obama's candidacy from the start.

Pros: Moderate, strengthens Obama in a key state and could deliver Republican waverers.

Cons: Could Obama select a woman who isn't Hillary without alienating her supporters?

James Webb

Senator Jim Webb of Virginia comes from a distinguished military lineage. He served as Ronald Reagan's navy secretary and has made a long political journey to become a Democrat politician. He is the author of Born Fighting: How The Scots-Irish Shaped America, which valourises the experience of poor Scottish and Irish immigrants to the US. His moderate policies and rock-solid military credentials are seen by some Democrat strategists as a dream combination, melding blue collar appeal to Obama's intellectualism.

Pros: Imaginative and unexpected choice.

Cons: Has been married three times. Says he isn't interested in the job.

And the other Democrat contenders: Hillary Clinton's selection as VP is looking unlikely, largely because of the damage she did during the nomination race. Timothy Kaine, the Virginia governor, has been subject to a "deeper dig" by Obama's vetting team. But with former Virginia governor Mark Warner being chosen to deliver a keynote address at this year's conference, has Kaine been overlooked? If Obama goes for a warhorse then it might be Sam Nunn's moment: the former Georgia senator has regularly been mentioned as a Democrat VP. Senator Christopher Dodd or retired general Wesley Clark could fulfil the role, and even Senator John Kerry or former Vice President Al Gore have been mooted.







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  • Last Updated: 17 August 2008 12:25 AM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: John McCain , US elections
 
1

Boy Wonder,

17/08/2008 07:31:55
Obama needs Hillary. It's so obvious!
2

MtnKat,

17/08/2008 11:25:45
#1 Boy Wonder
I think she's too savvy to go that route.
If McCain has any sense he will be on his knees begging Colin Powell to join him. That knocks out the race issue and Powell has stature and respect. He left the Missing Link's cabinet because he had the courage of his convictions.
3

,

17/08/2008 12:00:54
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
4

,

17/08/2008 12:02:32
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
5

Gere,

Scotland 17/08/2008 16:48:53
All any American Presidential candidate needs to secure the presidency is to polish up on his or her public grovelling techniques to AIPAC.

Oh and it would help if they, at the same grovelling scenario, pledged absolute obedience to the Knessest's whim.
6

Sandi,

San Diego 17/08/2008 17:34:56
If McCain "stood down" after one term, the Vice President does not automatically become president. There is a presidential election every four years and a second term has to be won. It's not automatic.

Hillary Clinton is best served by staying as far away as she can from the disaster known as Obama. She did no "damge" during the primaries. The presumptuous nominee, on the other hand, employed any kind of low trick he could think of and then accused her of doing it. He is slime. And the wonderful media believes every thing that comes out of his mouth, or from his campaign's emails. It's pathetic.
7

Silence of the Yams,

17/08/2008 19:30:02
Obama still doesn't convince. A poor candidate hyped up for one reason only.
8

henrymanchester,

UK 17/08/2008 23:09:36
Maybe one could use Donald Duck and the other Daffy Duck.
9

Wally,

By The Rivers Of Babylon (USA) 18/08/2008 01:43:51
a peculiar phenomenon lately in the US election drama is that Obama has only a slight lead in the polls. This is unfortunate, because the Republican party is severely disliked.

Here is a story below that will blow your mind.

http://www.opensecrets.org/news/2008/08/troops-deployed-abroad-give-61.html

Of all US military personnel they favor Obama in their financial contributions over McCain by a slight margin. But of US military actually deployed in a war, they contribute to Obama over McCain by a 6-1 margin. They also contribute to Ron Paul over McCain by a 4-1 margin. These statistics are through June 31.

Here's a web site selling a movie called I.O.U.S.A. the people that rule the US have arranged things so that my country goes perpetually into debt with no relief.

http://www.iousathemovie.com/
10

Wally,

By The Rivers Of Babylon (USA) 18/08/2008 01:54:46
here's a story about John McCain plagiarizing from Alexander Soltzenitzyn.

http://www.the-peoples-forum.com/cgi-bin/readart.cgi?ArtNum=3501

It amazes me that McCain is very pro-war, he turned the phrase 'bomb bomb bomb bomb Iran' into a funny joke. and yet some Americans call him 'pro-life'. I'm not saying that Obama is better, because he supports war as a concept also. Obama did give a strong anti-Iraq war speech in late 2002, he said he was against the Iraq war prior to being a US Senator which he became in January of 2005, but Obama always votes for the war-funding. and Obama also favors the Afghan war, and favors expanding it as well, and is positive towards the idea of roughing up Iran either with economic sanctions or with outright war. Obama is fundamentally pro-war. He shows every sign of serving the people who rule us. Many anti-war Americans support Obama merely on the hope that he might have a change of heart and become anti-war. A significant group of Americans wants to support Obama though they're convinced Obama is no good simply as a good-will gesture towards the rest of the world who seems to be convinced that Obama is a candidate of change.

If you want to know the truth - our country is ruled by an evil clique and we can do nothing about it. Yet we don't like it.

America is a strange place. it promotes a national ideology that says that 'we the people' rule the country through a voting process. About 70% of Americans favor withdrawing all troops from Iraq quickly and not attempting to achieve any goals whatsoever in that country. Yet America cannot produce anti-war politicians.

11

CombatVet68,

New Babylon 19/08/2008 06:23:56
Ignorance is bliss, so they say. Unfortuanetly, many do not fully comprehend the fact that the West is indeed fighting for survival. I detest the thought of just one person being killed in a war, for I have seen the face of war, yet, those who now cry for peace will either fight for their freedom or submit to tyranny. Rest assured that in the coming years, you will either fight or become subjagated to your enemies. (if you happen to be one of those who is not slaughtered outright).

Your wives, sisters, and daughters will be raped by the invading armies, your neighbors, friends, and family members will be machine gunned in the streets. Oh yes, you will either fight or wave the white flag of defeat. Just wait and watch! My guess is that you peace loving mice will wave the white flag of surrender.
12

CombatVet68,

New Babylon 19/08/2008 06:38:57
#10 Wally:

This nation has not been "...we the people..." for a very long time. Reagan recognized what was happening to this country when he denouced the increase of government and it's controls over the masses. he proposed to reduce the size of government, to no avail.

Obama stands for more governmental control. Instead of removing the fat from government, Obama wants to tax big business. The fact that "big business" employs many workers, pays huges salaries, and carries a tremendous tax burden even now, this wont stop Obama. Why do you think that a great many big corporations now outsource their jobs to countries like India, Pakistan, China, Korea, etc.?

We are no longer a nation of the people, for the people, and by the people. We are a nation for the government, by the government, and of the government. I'm not all that enamoured by McCain, but I am even less desirous to see Obama in the White House.
13

Wally,

by The Rivers Of babylon (USA) 19/08/2008 19:02:50
combatvet in 11 & 12: I always enjoy your comments because you are American loyal to our country and with great insights as well as empathy for our situation. However, we still disagree.

Obama may favor big government as you say. but republicans have shown that they also favor big government.

Reagan (I think) was the last president loyal to our country. He was overcome from within. He was blackmailed into picking GHW Bush as his VP. He told many people this. I have told the story repeatedly here on Scotsman of how he was blackmailed into that selection. During his 2'nd term something was wrong with him & his decisions.

The 1986 bill he signed to 'save social security' was nothing but a huge tax increase on the working classes alone. That bill paved the way for diverting social security tax revenue from social security and funding big government. Today 40% of all the money collected for social security is diverted and spent to fund big government.

From 1960 to 2000 always between 10% & 12% of all federal revenue came from the corporate income tax. Today it is near 5%. This is because of massive tax cuts by the republicans aimed strictly at big corporations.

Our enemies are the people who rule over us. They are the ones instigating & provoking the rest of the world. One day foreign armies will come to our country to kill us. that is true. republicans & democrats are the ones today causing that to happen. They are creating enemies for us.

We Americans must as individuals choose where our loyalties lie. Are they with the people who rule us? Or are they with our god? The world is today arranged so that each person worldwide as an individual can make this type of a choice. When judgement day comes our choice will be known. at that time the Kingdom of Heaven will be built here on earth. Prior to this all of the nations will be wiped away. including our nation. we shouldn't let our vanity or our pride cloud our thinking on these m
14

Wally,

By The Rivers Of Babylon (USA) 20/08/2008 05:46:03
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gBfngOsvmA0

here's a video about McCain's rising popularity.

Obama has anywhere from 3-5% lead in popular vote according to recent polls. in electoral votes you can see the bitter divisions between US states at following web-site. Obama wins also on EV's. and if you look at it, the states are pretty entrenched in factions as always.

http://www.fivethirtyeight.com/

When our country is divided I remember a verse Abraham Lincoln referred to.

"Matthew 12:25 And Jesus knew their thoughts, and said unto them, Every kingdom divided against itself is brought to desolation; and every city or house divided against itself shall not stand:"



 

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