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View Full Version : McCain has abundance of tough sells in VP search


WoodysGirl
04-11-2008, 12:27 PM
By Steve Holland
Fri Apr 11, 8:01 AM ET



WASHINGTON (Reuters) - As Republican presidential candidate John McCain starts thinking through who he wants as a vice presidential running mate, he may find that many potential picks carry risks as well as rewards.

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Political experts say McCain has many difficult choices to make on a running mate. If he pick a conservative, he risks alienating the moderate voters he prizes. If he picks a centrist, he should brace himself for the conservative fallout.

Take for example ex-Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, whom McCain defeated for the Republican presidential nomination. Romney has made clear he would not mind being No. 2.

But social conservatives remember that Romney supported abortion rights in Massachusetts before switching to a more conservative stance in his presidential race.

"If Gov. Romney is on your ticket, many social conservative voters will consider their values repudiated by the Republican Party and will either stay away from the polls this November or only vote down the ticket," said a letter sent to McCain and signed by 20 leading social conservatives.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has been in news reports so much recently as a vice presidential possibility that a WNBC/Marist poll found McCain and Rice would defeat, in New York state, a Democratic ticket of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton.

Rice denies she is interested in what would be her first political race. McCain told ABC's "The View" on Thursday that he had not talked to her about it.

"I have not, but all of us admire Condoleezza Rice. She's a great American. She's been a role model to all of us," he said.

EASY TARGET

Rice would carry risks, however, as an easy target for Democrats who accuse McCain of basically mimicking the policies of unpopular President George W. Bush.

Republican strategist John Feehery said that Rice, who is black, could help balance a McCain ticket against either Obama, who would be America's first black president, or Clinton, who would be the first woman president.

"It would be a historic choice," he said. "But I just don't sense that it's based on reality."

What about some of the other Republicans whom McCain defeated for the nomination? They also carry baggage.

Former New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani was never trusted by conservatives for his positions on abortion and gay rights. Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee is considered too inexperienced to be a heartbeat away from the presidency.

Former Tennessee Sen. Fred Thompson never really energized crowds on the campaign trail.

"There are a deep bench of presidential candidates but a thinner bench for vice presidential candidates," said Ken Weinstein, a political expert at the Hudson Institute. "A number of the presidential candidates would be tough sells."

McCain gets along famously with Connecticut Independent Sen. Joe Lieberman, a moderate who would appeal to independents. But conservatives remember Lieberman as the vice presidential running mate for Democrat Al Gore in 2000.

GOVERNORS BECKON

A number of Republican state governors are believed to be on McCain's list of 20-or-so candidates, such as Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, Florida Gov. Charlie Crist and South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford. There is also former Ohio Rep. Rob Portman, who was Bush's budget director.

None of them has a particularly high national profile. But they could help McCain capture a battleground state in the November election.

Grover Norquist, head of the conservative group Americans For Tax Reform, said McCain should reduce the importance of the vice presidential pick by first naming people he would appoint to other critical positions.

For example, he could say a conservative, former Texas Republican Sen. Phil Gramm, would be his treasury secretary, and conservative lawyer Ted Olson would lead McCain's effort to find federal judges.

In the end, however, there is a simple requirement for McCain, according to Todd Harris, a Republican strategist who was a McCain spokesman in his 2000 presidential bid.

"Regardless of which way he goes, I think he should pick someone who he is personally comfortable with, because unlike so many in Washington, he is not particularly good at faking friendships," Harris said.

(Editing by Xavier Briand)

ZeroClub
04-11-2008, 01:28 PM
Condoleezza Rice is getting a lot of favorable hype for VP these days, but I gotta believe that her key role in the current administration's use of "enhanced interrogation techniques" would turn her into a big liability during the general election.

Danny White
04-11-2008, 01:40 PM
It's funny how the author makes it sound like "conservatives" are the only ones who'd have a problem with McCain picking Lieberman. :lmao2:

I'd hope that ANY Republican would have serious qualms about that pick. My gosh, until a year ago, he's a life-long liberal Democrat with a hard-core left wing voting record. Just because he leans right on one or two issues DOES NOT make him a centrist.

I'm hoping it's Sanford or Coburn.

ZeroClub
04-11-2008, 02:34 PM
I agree on Lieberman. Turncoats aren't particularly popular people.

theogt
04-11-2008, 03:27 PM
So, a McCain/Rice ticket would actually have a shot at winning NY, yet somehow that ticket would be a tough sell? I don't get that at all.

ZeroClub
04-11-2008, 05:18 PM
So, a McCain/Rice ticket would actually have a shot at winning NY, yet somehow that ticket would be a tough sell? I don't get that at all.

Are you saying that you don't understand why Republicans would be hesitant to have Rice chosen as the VP candidate (in light of these preliminary McCain/Rice polls)?


I think those Republicans would say it is unwise to trust these preliminary polls. Rice has got that mile-wide-inch-deep name recognition level of support going for her right now. But once voters associate her closely with this most unpopular president, this unpopular war, etc. well, she's got a big potential downside.