Clinton, Kaine make joint campaign appearance
MIAMI: Hillary Clinton and newlynamed running mate Tim Kaine hit the campaign trail together on Saturday in the first test of the Democratic presidential team as the battle to beat Donald Trump in November enters its final stretch.
The former first lady tapped Kaine, 58, late on Friday in what was widely seen as a safe but wise choice: the popular Spanish-speaking senator from the swing state of Virginia is a political veteran and foreign policy hand who ticks a lot of boxes.
Widely seen as a safe choice in a brutal election race — Kaine himself jokes that he is “boring” — the senator could help Clinton lock in two key voting blocs: Hispanics and his battleground home state.
With working-class roots and a spotless record both as governor and senator, he is also seen as helping Clinton garner support among reluctant independent male voters — although at risk of alienating the party’s progressive left wing.
The two were to rally supporters in Miami on Saturday afternoon.
Fellow Democrats widely applauded Clinton’s choice of a man who she said has “devoted his life to fighting for others.”
The Democratic Party sent out a fundraising appeal on Saturday signed by US President Barack Obama, calling Kaine an fighter.”
“He’s the son of a teacher and an iron worker who’s always got working families on his mind,” the letter said.
“And when a gunman killed 32 people on the campus of Virginia Tech (in 2007), Tim knew he had a “optimist” and “progressive responsibility as governor to offer more than thoughts and prayers to the community he mourned with — and as a gun owner, he stood up to the gun lobby on their behalf.”
Kaine also has strong ties to the African-American community, dating back to his work as a civil rights lawyer.
Major labour and pro-Democratic groups also praised the Kaine pick, including Planned Parenthood, AFLCIO and other big unions, and the Sierra Club.
Clinton “understands how important that dynamic is between the vice president and the president, and I don’t think she wants to saddle herself with someone who might be helpful for the next four months and unhelpful for the next four or eight years,” former Obama adviser David Axelrod told CNN.
“He also is a United States senator who serves on both the Foreign Relations Committee and the Armed Services Committee, and is very fluent in national security issues which is going to be increasingly important apparently in this election.”