Dayton Daily News

Trump’s VP? Some in GOP jockeying for considerat­ion

- By Jill Colvin

Trips OXON HILL, MD. — to Mar-a-Lago. Glowing speeches. Front-row seats at major events.

The first Republican presidenti­al primaries are nearly a year away and the candidate field is unsettled. But already, a shadow contest of another sort is underway with several Republican­s openly jockeying to position themselves as potential running mates to Donald Trump, the early front-runner for the nomination.

“A lot of people are right now auditionin­g,” Trump boasted to supporters in Florida last month.

The mere mention of a running mate this early in the process is a departure from the traditiona­l timeline of presidenti­al primaries, where candidates typically spend the opening months of a campaign introducin­g themselves to voters and sharing their visions for the country. But as a former president, Trump needs no introducti­on and is eager to project an air of inevitabil­ity around his campaign, particular­ly as attention builds around Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who is widely seen as his toughest potential GOP rival.

Trump campaign officials insist that the vice presidenti­al search is not something they have been actively discussing.

“We appreciate all support for President Trump, but the clear focus is on making sure that he wins the Republican nomination and is well-posited to win the general election in 2024,” said Jason Miller, a longtime Trump adviser.

That, however, hasn’t stopped some could-be candidates from taking full advantage of opportunit­ies to be in close proximity to Trump, at his club and at events. The dynamic was on full display earlier this month at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference, where a trio of women who have been mentioned as possible contenders sat in the audience to cheer Trump’s headline speech.

They were Reps. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, Elise Stefanik of New York and Kari Lake, the news anchor-turned-failed-Arizona gubernator­ial candidate who ended her remarks at a keynote event dinner by kissing a portrait of Trump that was placed on stage.

While Trump, according to people who have spoken to him, is in no rush to make a decision and understand­s that he has to let the nomination process play out, he has nonetheles­s talked through possible choices since well before he formally announced his candidacy last fall. In those conversati­ons, he has indicated his interest in selecting a woman this time around.

But allies say Trump is looking, first and foremost, for someone who will be unabashedl­y loyal after feeling burned by former Vice President Mike Pence for refusing to overturn the results of the 2020 election.

In 2016, running as a celebrity businessma­n with no experience in politics, Trump chose a person who was, in many ways, his total opposite, picking the Indiana governor and former congressma­n who could bolster his standing with conservati­ves and the religious right.

Trump, this time, is looking for someone more like himself, said Michael Caputo, a longtime friend and adviser who believes Stefanik would be Trump’s best choice.

“I think the president learned a lot from his experience with Pence,” he said. “I think this time Trump’s going to be looking for someone cut from the same cloth he is, not from a different, complement­ary cloth.”

While Trump is looking for someone with star power, he has also signaled that he is reluctant to choose someone who might overshadow him in the race.

Among those who are seen as most eager for the job is Lake, who is popular with Trump’s MAGA base and won — and then promoted — a CPAC straw poll that asked audience members whom they would like to see as the Republican vice presidenti­al nominee. She is seen as unequivoca­lly loyal to the former president, but detractors note she lost her only race and continues to dispute the results, which would draw attention to Trump’s own election failures and intensify criticism that he is too focused on the past.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kari Lake speaks at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference on March 4 at National Harbor in Oxon Hill, Md.
ALEX BRANDON / ASSOCIATED PRESS Kari Lake speaks at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference on March 4 at National Harbor in Oxon Hill, Md.

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