Who will be Mitt's running mate?

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Who will Mitt Romney choose as his prospective VP?

  • Chris Christie

    Votes: 1 2.7%
  • Rob Portman

    Votes: 8 21.6%
  • Marco Rubio

    Votes: 14 37.8%
  • Paul Ryan

    Votes: 2 5.4%
  • Other

    Votes: 7 18.9%
  • Tim Pawlenty

    Votes: 5 13.5%
  • Bob McDonnell

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    37

Dick Whitman

Well-Known Member
Joined
May 1, 2009
Messages
45,703
For some reason, there seems to be a lot of momentum on Portman lately, probably because of his appeal in a swing state.

Thoughts? I figure this can perhaps be a thread for all things running mate.
 
See, **** that would make sense picking someone from a swing state. And yet, neither candidate did that in 2008.
 
I can't imagine Rubio isn't the overwhelming first choice.

There's part of me that has a hard time believing he would take it, but the "experts" all seem to say otherwise.
 
Greenhorn said:
See, **** that would make sense picking someone from a swing state. And yet, neither candidate did that in 2008.

Obama needed someone with experience. McCain needed someone who would energize the base.

I'd say both succeeded. :)

I don't think Edwards was able to deliver North Carolina in 2004. I think it's safe to say Cheney wasn't picked to deliver Wyoming. :D
 
Greenhorn said:
See, **** that would make sense picking someone from a swing state. And yet, neither candidate did that in 2008.

Although didn't Biden really play up his Pennsylvania bona fides?

He probably won't do it so I didn't put him on the list, but Mitch Daniels would have the dual effect of securing a fringe swing state (probably going red anyway), but also getting people out for the huge down ticket battle in that state.
 
I voted "other" for no particular reason.

Whoever it is, he or she will be living in Joe Biden's house this time next year.
 
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I think it will/has to be Rubio., but I'd be thrilled with Ryan as well.

They are each articulate, and confident. They can defend, and promote conservatism, and capitalism.

And, judging from his performance on FoxNewsSunday last week, I think Rubio could be the kind of attack dog VP nominee we haven't seen in a while -- all while not coming across as "angry".

Ryan could too, and would help focus the debate on the economy. The question would be whether or not the electorate likes his recipe for recovery.
 
It's been a pretty long time since a VP was clearly picked to deliver a swing state.

I know Kennedy famously did it with LBJ in 1960.

It's arguable whether that would apply to Rubio, since he's considered an up-and-comer in the republican party and wouldn't be picked just to deliver Florida.

If he picked Portman, it would be pretty obvious.
 
It seemed like Biden added even less to the ticket than a VP candidate would normally.....
 
Birthers have attempted to morph the "Obama was born in Kenya" argument into, "both his parents weren't citizens, so he's not eligible for office."

That makes a Rubio choice problematic, at least to a certain, less sane, more vocal portion of the electorate.
 
Greenhorn said:
It seemed like Biden added even less to the ticket than a VP candidate would normally.....

I'm not going to lie, I liked the pick at the time.
 
Mizzougrad96 said:
Greenhorn said:
It seemed like Biden added even less to the ticket than a VP candidate would normally.....

I'm not going to lie, I liked the pick at the time.

I just figured Obama would go with someone from Ohio or Florida.
 
I can't think of anyone from either state that would have helped him (not that he needed it...).

They like to say that picking a VP from a certain state doesn't usually help, but I kind of discount that because it really hasn't happened enough times to really judge this.
 
Justin_Rice said:
Birthers have attempted to morph the "Obama was born in Kenya" argument into, "both his parents weren't citizens, so he's not eligible for office."

That makes a Rubio choice problematic, at least to a certain, less sane, more vocal portion of the electorate.

Rubio does have issues, but I think the birther stuff is way down the list.

The drug dealer brother-in-law might be more problematic.
 
Justin_Rice said:
Birthers have attempted to morph the "Obama was born in Kenya" argument into, "both his parents weren't citizens, so he's not eligible for office."

That makes a Rubio choice problematic, at least to a certain, less sane, more vocal portion of the electorate.

Not any more than Romney, whose father was born in Mexico.
 
YankeeFan said:
And, judging from his performance on FoxNewsSunday last week, I think Rubio could be the kind of attack dog VP nominee we haven't seen in a while

In what, 3 1/2 years?
 
There's a story on this in Politico today, in which some unnamed GOP bigwig is quoted as saying "they're looking for an incredibly boring white guy." So Portman or Pawlenty it is.
As with most human organizations, the Romney campaign is overreacting to the last war (campaign). They don't want a Palin, so they'll overreach the other way.
 

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