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Monday, July 09, 2012

Watcher's Forum:Whom Will Mitt Romney Will Pick As His Running Mate? Whom Would You Pick?




As the 2012 presidential campaign winds on,one question on everyone's mind is who Mitt Romney will pick as his running mate. The Council and our invited guests weigh in:

The Razor: I believe that the VP slot cannot help a ticket much but it can hurt it. Consequently whomever Romney selects should be more conservative than he is, to solidify the base, but different enough from him to get people talking. I would like to see Allen West because he presents such a contrast to Romney. Ex-military, African-American from humble roots, and a vicious attack dog of a conservative. The press wouldn’t know what to make of him and would have a very difficult time painting him as a GOP “Uncle Tom.” His pick would excite and rally the base in a way that Palin did 4 years ago.

The Independent Sentinal:Realclearpolitics listed Paul Ryan, Bob Portman, Tim Pawlenty and Bobby Jindal as the four they think are on the short list. Portman might bring in Ohio and I like Paul Ryan but we need him where he is. Pawlenty doesn't bring enough to the table and Jindal will forever be remembered for one bad speech.

The women being mentioned as long shots are Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire, Nikki Haley of South Carolina, and Susanna Martinez of New Mexico with its 5 electoral votes. She is a female Hispanic who has been critical of Romney's ideas on illegal immigration. Ayotte is too similar to Romney, coming from the NE, but Nikki Haley is someone I find compelling.

Despite others' picks, Marco Rubio is my first and only choice. He brings intelligence, he's Hispanic though I heard Cubans don't count as much as other Hispanics. He has a real talent for speaking and he has the charisma the ticket needs. I don't buy into the media's version of his alleged negatives - they want him gone. That should tell us something. The ticket needs excitement and Rubio will bring that and possibly Florida.

Joshuapundit: I think there are several criteria involved here. Obviously,Governor Romney will want someone he's comfortable with. He will also want someone who is articulate, perhaps a bit more conservative in reputation that he is and a good campaigner...remember, the traditional role of running mate is that of an attack dog so the candidate can stay above the fray to a degree and look presidential. And most of all, he will be looking at what his running mate can bring to the table in terms of electoral votes in what could be a very close election.The idea, after all, is to win.

Based on that, I doubt he's going to pick someone from a solid Red state like Bobby Jindal, Nikki Haley or John Thune. I think his overall best pick would be someone from the following list: Marco Rubio, provided he can be counted on to deliver Florida's 29 electoral votes; Rob Portman, if he can carry Ohio; or Tim Pawlenty if he can deliver Minnesota, in that order. Wild card picks would be Rep. Paul Ryan (if he wants to leave the House, which I doubt), or Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers of Washington, who is eminently qualified but like several others people are speculating on brings little to the table electoral vote-wise in terms of carrying her home state. On the other hand , she would appeal to voters because she's smart, conservative, attractive, articulate, has farm roots, and is well qualified as a 4 term Congresswoman who has served on the Armed Services and energy committees and is part of the House leadership. Don't be surprised if she ends up being 2012's Sarah Palin, in the good sense of the word and with a happier ending.

Any of these people can count on being slimed by the media, so that isn't a concern of mine. If they deliver on the stump and in debate, the American people will make up their own minds.

Bookworm Room:Mitt Romney should pick either Paul Ryan, which will show that Romney's serious about the economy, or someone with real foreign policy chops (unlike Biden's fake foreign policy chops) to balance Romney's perceived domestic and economic strengths. I suspect that Romney will manage to pick someone who leaves me cold -- and I'll be irritated if he picks Sen. Ayotte just to get a woman on the ticket.

The Right Planet:Marco Rubio probably has the greatest name recognition among Americans, and certainly would be a fine pick for the VP slot. Paul Ryan, while not as well known as Rubio, would be a good personality fit with Romney, in my opinion. Additionally, I have read reports the Romney camp is looking at some female candidates: New Hampshire Sen. Kelly Ayotte, New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez, South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin, and former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

If I could have my choice for VP, it would be Rep. Allen West (R-FL). Although, I'm not sure how well Romney and West would gel; their backgrounds are quite different. I don't think Romney has the spine West does. So, I doubt Romney would consider him. West would probably upstage Romney.

Right Truth:Since Mitt Romney has all the charisma of a wet blanket, he will pick someone for his VP running mate who is less exciting, less animated, because he doesn’t want to be overshadowed. So Tim Pawlenty or Sen. Rob Portman of Ohio appears to be the top choices.

In spite of the fact that six in 10 Americans say they've never heard of Portman, pundits on both sides keep bringing his name up as a likely choice. Pawlenty was on John McCain’s short list for VP.

As to who would I pick, the list would start and end with Congressman Lieutenant Colonel Allen West of Florida. West has it all: not a career politician, Military experience, a true Conservative, TEA party supporter, strong speaker, not politically correct, able to take criticism, doesn’t change views depending on which way the political winds are blowing. He is the perfect pick. With Allen West as VP, he would be a perfect President-in-waiting. I rest my case.

The Noisy Room:My money is on Marco Rubio. He helps solidify the Hispanic vote. Although I don't believe Rubio is the best choice. I can't reconcile his stance on Amnesty and lately he strikes me as too politically 'moderate.' It's a shame as he was Tea Party, but seems to have fallen into step with the beltway crowd. He's handsome, charismatic and the perfect second fiddle to Romney. At least neither Romney or Rubio is a communist. 'Nough said. Pawlenty might be a better choice in my opinion and may land the spot. Portman and Ryan also have a shot. But Rubio is the highest profile candidate out there as of now. Among the women out there, Kelly Ayotte from New Hampshire would be the best of the lot I believe. Closely followed by Nikki Haley of South Carolina and Mary Fallin of Oklahoma.

If this were a sane world, Allen West would be VP. But he is too honest and brave for the Romney camp. That's okay - West has a future as President of the United States.

Liberty's Spirit:If I had my druthers I would chose Gov. Bobby Jindal for Romney’s VP. His term as governor of Louisiana has been characterized by tremendous competency. His first course of business was fixing a broken ethics system, which actually gave businesses the desire to come invest in Louisiana. This led to the turn around in Louisiana’s economy which in turn led to an upgrade in the state’s credit rating. While downsizing the size of government he kept a humane view of the people involved in the downgrade by allowing a private placement firm to help those fired find new jobs. He successfully had the state take over the failing New Orleans school district leading to a dramatic improvement in the students’ test scores and retention. He revamped and upgraded the hundred-year-old state-run-healthcare system.

He has been able to reach across party lines to become a highly Respected Republican in a traditionally blue-governor- state. He is what we used to call a compassionate conservative. The truth is that he is not afraid to do what is necessary for all the people of Louisiana, including standing up for State’s rights against the Obama Administration particularly in the wake of the BP oil spill. He is seen as honest, ethical and fair-minded.His inclusion would add another element to the narrative, that the GOP is not anti-immigrant, but anti-illegal immigration, two issues that the Democrats have been trying to solder together.

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3 comments:

  1. As a South Carolina resident, I think Nikki Haley is a bad choice. Not because of anything she has done or not done, but she is currently already being "palinized" here--lodging trumped up accusations at her, forcing her to waste time and energy fighting them. Sarah Palin had more wherewithal, charisma, and energy to fight them. Nikki Haley doesn't come off quite as well when she does. It's unfortunate that something so silly should count against a candidate, but thanks to the left, that's where we are....

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  2. And can I toss out another person to consider: Luis Fortuno of Puerto Rico. He's done some similar things for Puerto Rico as has Bobby Jindal for Louisiana, and the fact that he is Hispanic is icing on the cake.

    Me, I'm a fan of him, Jindal, West, and Rubio. I think Portman is a bad choice. All I hear from the Lame Stream Media is how "white" Romney is, and Portman is just miracle whip in the wonder bread. Even Paul Ryan offers more, uh, "color" to the ticket.

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  3. Allen West or that latino guy, Marco Rubio.

    (Yes, I am pandering for minority votes!)

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