VP




While the Democrats in Denver flail around trying to find a coherent message with which to attack Barack Obama, John McCain has apparently decided on his Vice-Presidential running mate. But we don't yet know who it is! U.S. News reports that Mitt Romney is "out." McCain will reportedly inform the winner tomorrow and then announce it on Friday at the 12 Noon ET rally in Dayton, Ohio.

I would not be surprised though, if word just happened to leak out to some intrepid reporter late tomorrow afternoon - just about the time Obama begins his speech at the Parthenon in Invesco Field:

Sen. McCain has chosen his running mate and the person will be notified on Thursday, a senior campaign official said.

A friend said McCain had pretty much settled on his selection early this week, and it crystallized in the past few days. Campaign manager Rick Davis flew to McCain's cabin in Sedona, Ariz., a few days ago to confer, and another meeting about the choice was held with top aides Wednesday.

The news leaked on the third night of the Democratic National Convention, detracting attention from speeches by former President Bill Clinton and the Democratic ticket mate, Sen. Joe Biden of Delaware.

McCain's selection process has been conducted mostly in secret, but officials said he was considering one or more candidates who support abortion rights. The disclosure set off a fracas on the right wing, with talk-show host Rush Limbaugh saying such a selection would destroy the party.

McCain is planning to roll out his vice presidential nominee in three battleground states this weekend, with large-scale rallies planned for Ohio, Pennsylvania and Missouri, according to aides and advisers.

The GOP nominee-in-waiting will move to immediately change the campaign conversation from Barack Obama’s football stadium acceptance speech Thursday to the new Republican ticket, to be revealed at a noontime Friday rally in a Dayton, Ohio, basketball arena. McCain and his running mate will then travel by bus to Pennsylvania, where they’ll hold an outdoor event at a minor league baseball stadium in Washington County, just southwest of Pittsburgh. On Sunday, the duo will head to suburban St. Louis for another event to be held at a minor league baseball stadium, this one in O’Fallon, Mo.







Over the last few days, there has been an increase of speculation that Texas Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison is in the mix to be John McCain's Vice-Presidential nominee. Hutchison is a veteran of the GOP and the Senate, and would have strong appeal to women voters across the country. It does not sound like a probable pick, but interesting nonetheless:

Texas Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison's long-shot prospect for vice president is getting a push from conservative and other pundits in the lead-up to next week's Republican National Convention.

The latest flurry of speculation online and on cable television constitutes at least a third or fourth wave of chatter about Hutchison, whose name surfaces occasionally as a possible Republican vice-presidential candidate.

Hutchison, a delegate to next week's convention, will address the gathering in Minneapolis-St. Paul on the subject of energy independence on Sept. 3, her office announced Tuesday.

The speaker slot would seem to douse the veep-talk, but no one would say for sure. A spokesman for Hutchison declined to comment, and the McCain campaign did not return a call about McCain's colleague from Texas.

"She is female, which addresses the novelty of the opposition; she is smart and well-respected; she is knowledgeable on key issues, especially domestic policy," said Bruce Buchanan, a University of Texas at Austin government professor. "I still think it's going to be Mitt Romney."

McCain, the Arizona senator and presumptive Republican nominee, is expected to announce his choice for vice president at the end of the week.

Hutchison, 66, would be "an excellent choice," syndicated husband-and-wife columnists Dick Morris and Eileen McGann said in a piece that catalyzed renewed speculation on the subject.

"She's been around for decades and is not going to start making mistakes now," they wrote. "Her nomination would be a signal to American women that McCain takes their aspirations seriously, even if Obama does not. Hutchison is not charismatic. But her circumstances would be if she were nominated. The prospect of a woman vice president would electrify women throughout the nation."

Hutchison has served in the Senate since a 1993 special election.

She has said she will not seek re-election in 2012, and is expected to step down before then, for a likely run in the 2010 governor's race.

Houston Republican political consultant Allen Blakemore, who has worked for Hutchison in the past, noted she just scheduled an Oct. 1 campaign event for County Judge Ed Emmett's re-election bid, and said a veep spot seems unlikely.

"She has clearly set her sights on governor and looks at that as the way she wants to complete her long and distinguished career of public service," Blakemore said.

Earlier this week on CNN, Republican strategist Ed Rollins touted Hutchison as "well respected" and a name McCain should consider.

The short odds for McCain's vice-presidential picks include Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, former White House budget official Rob Portman of Ohio and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney.

"The conservatives could probably stomach (Hutchison) a lot better than a Tom Ridge or Joe Lieberman," said University of Houston political scientist Richard Murray. "She is a woman and their strategy seems to be to go for disaffected Clinton voters. But I would say this is more like the Chet Edwards boomlet — it raises the profile, there is no downside to being mentioned, but Hutchison at this point looks like a last-minute ploy, not a considered judgment."







Conservative talk show host, Glenn Beck, today announced his prediction for VP on the GOP ticket, allthough he feels he cannot pull the lever for John McCain at the polls this year, according to his sources within the former Romney campaign - Mitt Romney & John McCain have been discussing several joint appearances for campaign stops in the future.

I highly doubt McCain will pick Romney, way to much baggage.







Have you ever looked at one of the maps of county-by-county Primary Vote Results? They tell the story very clearly.

1) Huckabee dominated the rural areas.

2) McCain dominated the urban areas.

3) Romney competed with McCain for the urban areas and couldn't even touch the rural areas.

Between the 3 of them, the 2 who would complement each other the best is McCain and Huckabee. e.g. Missouri

http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/primaries/results/state/#MO

As an added bonus, Clinton voters will be easier to "pick off" this election, so McCain would be wise pick someone who is strong in her geographical areas. If you look, you will see that Obama and Clinton shared the same dynamic. Clinton dominated the rural areas and Obama took the urban areas.

It should be very obvious. If McCain picks Huckabee, HE WILL DEFINITELY WIN.







Rich Lowry is suggesting a second look at Mike Huckabee for Vice-President. He does make a compelling case:

There's no indication that Huckabee is being considered, so consider this idle speculation like the Hillary chatter prior to Obama's pick. But wouldn't Huckabee make a lot of sense given the things we've learned the last two weeks?

1) McCain might have a "wealth problem," and certainly Democrats are going to try to hit his wealth for all its worth in their play for working-class voters; Huckabee doesn't have a problem on this front, and has lots of working-class cred.

2) The pro-choice trial balloon hasn't been well received, and it's clear that a pro-choice nominee would create a major disruption; Huckabee is pro-life.

3) Obama picked Biden who is going to a vivid presence (for better or worse) on the stump and could be formidable in debate; Huckabee is a great campaigner and might be just the guy to puncture Biden in a debate.

4) (This is a less important point.) The McCain folks have made a huge deal about differences between Obama and Biden during the primaries; McCain and Huckabee didn't have much in the way of differences and went out of their way to praise each other.

The other upsides are the press likes Huckabee (for now), he's a different kind of Republican, and his selection would be such a shock, it might even be considered bold.

The downsides are—as I've noted many times before—he doesn't have much in the way of national security credentials and has a big seriousness gap, obviously not trifling matters. But if McCain can't do Lieberman, and isn't thrilled by Pawlenty or Romney, Huckabee might be worth a last-minute second look.







McCain is not the best choice if you as me but that is what we got. The campaign better be able to rebut these charges on his flip flopping. The left is ready to chew him on it. Rudy or Romney would have been in my opinion the better candidates. Anyway, check out the link below and how they are beating McCain up and how presuasive they are to the point I don't even feel excited anymore about this election. The other guys seems so organized than the Republicans.

Check this out...
http://www.thecarpetbaggerreport.com/flipflops







Here is what the Daily Kos had to say about Joe Biden back in January 2008:

Really, if we live in a just world, this will be the end of Joe Biden's political career. On Barack Obama:

“I mean, you got the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy,” he said. “I mean, that’s a storybook, man.”

"Articulate". "Mainstream". "Bright and clean".

It's clear his career has dragged on one election cycle too many.

Notice the link from Daily Kos to Talking Points Memo leads to a page that has been scrubbed, apparently. The liberals appear to be already scrambling to remove negative statements by Biden about Obama.








As the saying goes, "A picture is worth a thousand words!"







1).
The Democrats have always claimed to be the party of diversity, not all white men like the Republicans, the Republicans have never nominated a women for VP ever, and the Democrats did it once - in the election they would never win in the 1984 re-election year of Ronald Reagan ( which every state voted for Reagan except Minnesota & DC. ), and with the Democrats not going to be selecting Hilary Clinton - this would energize the female base towards the Republicans.
2).
It would make the two campaigns equal in every sense of the word :
Experience - John McCain vs. Joe Biden
Young, Charisma - Sarah Palin vs. Barack Obama.

Saraha Palin is the perfect fit.





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By next Friday, we will officially know who the running mate of John McCain will be for this up-coming election, I can hardly wait, it's hard to tell - who might be the selection, as the GOP has so many good choices' to VEEP from this year, including :
Mike Huckabee
Mitt Romney
My favorite - Sarah Palin
Bobby Jindal
Joe Leiberman
Pawlently
Eric Cantor
and several more.

The Democrats on the other hand, it appears B.O. has picked Senator Joe Biden, a faily well-known senator.
The Republicans must up the ante.

Shockingly, no body has any idea who McCain will pick, and for some-know reason the media keeps putting Ridge on the list of possible VPs, but he supports the pro-choice agenda - something McCain says he will not pick a VP who support pro-choice, its political suicide.

I am pulling for Mrs.Palin to be selected as VP, but quite frankly - I have no idea who the nominee will be.
http://makingthecaseforpalin.blogspot.com/2008/08/mccain-to-announce-vp-...




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