New York Post

Joe Biden’s Perilous Veep-Balancing Act

- MICHAEL BARONE

IF the presidenti­al-nominating process is the weakest part of our political system, the vice-presidenti­al selection process comes solidly in second place. Some might even argue it’s a contender for the top spot. That’s been particular­ly the case in the two most recent election cycles. The 2016 election saw Republican and Democratic nominees ages 70 and 69 on Election Day, respective­ly, elevate the actuarial odds of a vice president succeeding to the presidency to the highest level in history.

This year, the Republican and Democratic nominees turn 74 and 78. With Vice President Mike Pence sure to be renominate­d, the focus is on Joe Biden’s choice.

Foreigners must consider it odd that 30 to 34 million people participat­e in selecting presidenti­al nominees, but it’s taken for granted that vice-presidenti­al nominees are selected by just one person.

They may also consider it odd that

Joe Biden has limited his choice to women and, apparently, to women of color. That limits the plausible picks to a very small percentage, and each of the names mentioned seems to have at least one plausible disqualify­ing characteri­stic.

Former National Security Adviser

Susan Rice, for example, with more foreign-policy and national-security experience than the others, was the

Obama administra­tion’s designated liar, going on five Sunday programs as United Nations ambassador in

2012 to spread a legend about Benghazi. Sen. Kamala Harris is regarded by many Democrats as having been too prosecutor­ial when she was district attorney in San Francisco. Rep. Karen Bass was a big fan of Fidel Castro. Rep. Val Demings was a cop — a problem for the left.

Looking back, the two women previously nominated for vice president, former Rep. Geraldine

Ferraro and former Gov. Sarah Palin, also had thin credential­s and glaring weaknesses. But both, in my view, performed better in their fall campaigns than the men who selected them. Maybe Biden’s choice will, too.

And there’s historical precedent for nominees choosing from a sharply narrowed field. The Democratic Party has, from its beginnings, been a coalition of outgroups, capable of winning majorities when united.

Keeping them together, however, can be hard work. Narrowing the veep list to women, or black women, rewards two decadeslon­g core constituen­cies, feministmi­nded female college graduates and blacks. The prospect of a black female vice president might maximize turnout of college females and blacks.

Of course, Americans have already elected a black president and nearly elected a woman. The prospect of a black woman vice president might seem no big deal. After John F. Kennedy won the presidency with 78 percent of Catholic votes in 1960, Catholic veep nominees were chosen by Republican­s in 1964 and by Democrats in 1968 and 1972.

Democrats have had to choose from narrow fields of veep possibilit­ies before. In the six decades after the Civil War, when the party’s major constituen­cies were white Southerner­s and Catholic immigrants, it was considered unthinkabl­e to put a Southerner or a Catholic on the ticket.

During these years, Democrats — and Republican­s — usually nominated Northern Protestant­s from New York, Ohio or Indiana, the three large marginal states in close elections.

Between 1868 and 1920, every winning ticket and most losing tickets had at least one nominee from these three states, which

Each of the names mentioned has at least characteri­stic.’ one plausible disqualify­ing

were the home bases of the winning veeps in 10 of 14 elections.

There’s a stronger argument for ticket balancing, at least since former President Jimmy Carter and former Vice President Walter Mondale reinvented the vice presidency as a working part of the executive branch. All but one of the vice presidents selected then had a career path and a set of experience­s significan­tly different from those of the presidents who selected them.

Former Vice Presidents Walter Mondale, Dan Quayle, Al Gore, Joe Biden and Mike Pence have 12 to 36 years of congressio­nal experience, compared with zero to four years for the presidenti­al nominees who picked them. George H.W. Bush and Dick Cheney had years of foreign-policy and national-security-policy experience, while the nominees who picked them had virtually none.

Joe Biden, with tons of experience, is said to be wary of an ambitious veep. Balancing the ticket that way wouldn’t be unpreceden­ted but might be unnerving to voters with a sense of the actuarial odds.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States