vp pick




Tim Pawlenty is officially out of the VP race. Jonathan Martin reports that Pawlenty said this morning he will not be in Dayton, Ohio today for the VP unveiling, but was "honored to be considered":

Gov. Tim Pawlenty said this morning that he will he not be in Dayton, Ohio, this morning and strongly suggested that he won't be John McCain's running mate.

"I'm going to be at the [Minnesota] state fair," Pawlenty said on WCCO just minutes ago.

"I will not be in Dayton, Ohio, so I think that's a fair assumption," he added in an interview with the Twin Cities radio station, when asked if this was an indication that he would not be chosen.

He added: "It was an honor to be considered."

Asked if he was relieved "that the whole thing was over," he joked: "I'm glad you guys will quit following me around so much."

Just a note of interest: Drudge now has a picture of Sarah Palin at the top of the page. He has not been very accurate so far, but it makes you wonder.







It's morning, and we still don't know who John McCain's running mate will be! Thus far, the name has not leaked out to the press. The McCain Campaign told Fox News that he will wait until 12 Noon EDT to announce his choice at a rally in Dayton, Ohio:

John McCain will wait until noon ET Friday to name his vice presidential running mate, senior campaign officials told FOX News.

They said no authorized leaks will go out overnight in deference to Barack Obama’s acceptance of the Democratic presidential nomination Thursday night.

FOX News confirmed Thursday that McCain had made his selection. McCain was scheduled to appear with his choice at a noon rally in Dayton, Ohio on Friday.

Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, a short-lister on the vice presidential selection sweeps, is expected to be in Dayton on Friday. Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, who like Romney was a former primary season rival to McCain, sent an e-mail to supporters on Thursday evening saying he will not be at the rally.

On Thursday afternoon, Gov. Tim Pawlenty returned from Denver to his home state of Minnesota, where the Republican National Convention will be held next week, and attended his daughter’s volleyball game during the evening. He said he planned to deliver his usual radio address at the state fair on Friday morning.

The McCain Campaign has done an impressive job of keeping this under wraps. Pawlenty insisted late last night that he has no plans to fly to Dayton, Ohio, which would seem to indicate he will not be the pick.

Pawlenty says he still plans to be at the Minnesota State Fair Friday, where he's to do his weekly radio show, and that he has no plans to fly to Ohio, where McCain is expected to announce his choice at a rally in Dayton Friday.

But most speculation still centers on Pawlenty and Mitt Romney. We should know very soon - in less than five hours at the latest!









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."







Here is an interview of John McCain by Fox News' Carl Cameron from August 12th. McCain discusses drilling,veep selection,georgia and other issues with Carl. The interview is over 6 minutes long and actually very candid at times. Great interview.









Sources close to the McCain Campaign say that Virginia Congressman Eric Cantor is being vetted as a possible Vice-Presidential choice. Reports are that Cantor has been asked for documents in the vetting process, but the source did not specify what kind of documents:

John McCain's campaign has asked Virginia Rep. Eric Cantor for personal documents as the Republican presidential candidate steps up his search for a running mate, The Associated Press has learned.

Cantor, 45, the chief deputy minority whip in the House, has been mentioned among several Republicans as a possible running mate for McCain. A Republican familiar with the conversations between Cantor and the McCain campaign said Cantor has been asked to turn over documents, but did not know specifically what records were sought.

The individual spoke on the condition of anonymity because neither the McCain campaign nor Cantor's office wishes to discuss the running mate selection process.

Cantor through a spokesman declined to comment. McCain spokesman Brian Rogers said the campaign would have "no comment on anything related to the vice presidential issue."







Newsweek is reporting that Sen. Barack Obama will now likely delay announcing his VP Choice until the week before the Democratic National Convention begins on August 25. They are also reporting that a new dark-horse has emerged in the VP Sweepstakes - Texas Congressman Chet Edwards:

The "shortlist" of options to be Barack Obama's running mate is longer than most media accounts have suggested. In addition to the familiar front runners—Delaware Sen. Joe Biden, Indiana Sen. Evan Bayh and Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine—there are at least two other veepstakes contenders: New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, who enraged Hillary Clinton supporters by endorsing Obama during the primaries, and a genuine dark horse, TexasRep. Chet Edwards, whose district includes President George W. Bush's ranch in Crawford. Obama's campaign had hoped to announce his pick this week to grab the spotlight before the Beijing Olympics. But now a decision is unlikely to come until the week before the party convention, which begins in Denver on Aug. 25. According to party sources close to the selection process, who asked not to be identified discussing an internal matter, progress was slowed by Obama's overseas trip—and because his list is more fluid than generally thought. Edwards, 56, has been pushed by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other congressional Democrats who cite his work on veterans' affairs and nuclear nonproliferation, as well as his potential to attract Southern white blue-collar voters. Pelosi has called Edwards "one of the finest people I've ever served with." His stock rose further, one source said, after a meeting with Obama, though his low national profile remains a hurdle.

In fact, Obama aides have identified potential drawbacks to all the front runners. Biden brings foreign-policy expertise, but there are lingering concerns that his garrulous tendencies might knock the campaign off message. Bayh, who the sources say has been lobbying hard for the nod, brings solid centrist credentials. (An aide says Bayh is not "actively" pursuing the job.) But his wife serves on numerous corporate boards, and she also previously worked as a lawyer for drug giant Eli Lilly—an inconvenient link for a party committed to health-care reform. Kaine is seen as a "change" candidate, but he has no national-security experience. Clinton remains a possibility, but her chances are seen as remote, if only because of the near impossibility of vetting her husband's business affairs.

Chet Edwards would be an interesting pick for Obama. They just might believe he would put Texas in play, along with several other Southern states. But another Edwards - John Edwards - proved in 2004 that just being on the ticket does not guarantee a win in the home state. North Carolina went for George W. Bush.









This story is getting a lot of attention today. It seems that everyone is trying to pick McCain's VP these days. Myself included. Romney said yesterday on Sean Hannity's radio show that he believes there are about 20 people on McCains list. With the election 8 months away and McCain having wrapped up the nomination, there are only a few more surprises left on the schedule. That excludes pending devastating revelations about the candidates that will surely be exposed in the following months leading up to the general election. :)

From AP

Mar 27, 6:50 PM (ET)

By LIZ SIDOTI
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - In a show of Republican unity, one-time bitter foes John McCain and Mitt Romney raised money and campaigned together Thursday for a single goal - getting McCain elected president.  read more »






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