The selection of a vice president
is not only an exercise in political handicapping, but also a national
rite of statecraft. Candidates, advisers, pundits and assorted experts
try to calculate the ethnic, geographic, gender and ideological
characteristics of potential running mates, but what this choice
actually reveals is the character of a presidential nominee.
For
Barack Obama, the choice of a vice president is a test of his
self-confidence and his vaunted judgment. Should he seek to mollify the
disappointed Clinton supporters, especially among his party’s women? Or
should he try to balance his own political weaknesses with somebody
else’s strengths? Will he attempt to win a specific region with his
choice, or even one crucial state? For John McCain, this decision will
reflect the character issue that is now at the center of his campaign.
Should he try to motivate the sullen base of the Republican Party by
picking a right-wing hard-liner? Or should he renew his appeal to
independents and even Democrats with a fresh-faced reformer? Can he
strike deep into the opposition by choosing a female or minority
candidate (or both)?
For either candidate, the selection process may be
complicated by extraneous considerations. Suffering under a financial
disadvantage, for example, the Republican campaign could be tempted by
the likes of Mitt Romney, whose willingness to spend his own millions
on negative ads certainly impressed McCain during the primaries. It is
hard to imagine any other reason why the straight-talker would tap a
politician he so ardently despises.
Meanwhile, certain leaders of the religious right are openly promoting the candidacy of Mike Huckabee, the former Arkansas
governor and extinguished fad of the early primaries. Personable as he
is, Huck nevertheless emphasizes the Republican extremism that is now
out of favor with most American voters. He also talks too much and says
stupid things about shooting people.
So perhaps McCain, who
will turn 72 just before his party’s convention and looks even older,
would do better with a young conservative governor like Tim Pawlenty of
Minnesota or Bobby Jindal of Louisiana.
The only problem with the youth gambit is that a political newcomer on
the ticket would undermine his most compelling argument against Obama.
Democrats with the strongest military credentials include Sen. James Webb, the former Reagan Navy secretary who just might capture the electoral votes of his home state of Virginia, and Gen. Wesley K. Clark, who served as supreme commander of NATO during the Clinton administration. Both are decorated Vietnam veterans.
What Obama and
McCain should remember as they draw up their lists is that many, if not
all, successful vice-presidential nominees were chosen by instinct as
much as by crass calculation. Bill Clinton chose Al Gore because he
wanted to make a statement about generational change, but also because
he thought they could govern well together. Al Gore chose Joe Lieberman
to make a statement about Bill Clinton, a mistake he will always
regret. George W. Bush chose Dick Cheney to buy himself a
touch of badly needed gravitas. That choice didn’t help him win the
2000 election, which he actually lost—but Cheney certainly helped
secure his legacy as one of history’s worst presidents.
The
lesson is to be bold as well as thoughtful—and above all, to treat the
vice presidency as a national trust and not a campaign gimmick.
© 2008 Creators Syndicate Inc.
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