The Mercury News Weekend

Stop worrying about Biden’s choice for vice president

- By Doyle McManus Los Angeles Times Doyle McManus is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2020, Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

WASHINGTON >> For weeks, the closest thing to drama on the Democratic side of the presidenti­al campaign has been the Veepstakes: The mysterious process by which Joe Biden is choosing his candidate for vice president.

Who’s up? Who’s down? Will it be Sen. Kamala Harris of California, Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachuse­tts, Sen. Tammy Duckworth of Illinois, Rep. Val Demings of Florida, or someone else?

Political junkies, including me, are watching the Veepstakes mostly because it’s the only entertainm­ent the Biden Channel offers.

But most Americans are not on the edges of their seats, and that’s understand­able.

The sobering truth is that it doesn’t much matter who Biden picks, as long as she doesn’t turn out to be a belly flop; an embarrassi­ng mistake.

In recent history, the only vice presidenti­al choices that had major effects on an election were the failures: Democrat George McGovern’s choice of Sen. Thomas Eagleton in 1972 and Republican John McCain’s choice of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin in 2008.

Eagleton withdrew from the race after reports that he had undergone electric shock treatments for depression. Palin stumbled so badly in interviews that many voters questioned McCain’s judgment in choosing her.

Much of the folklore about vice presidenti­al candidates’ purported impact has turned out to be wrong.

Running mates don’t guarantee that a presidenti­al ticket will win the No. 2 candidate’s home state; that may have worked half a century ago, but not anymore.

Nor do they guarantee that the ticket will win a particular demographi­c group; the first major party female candidates, Geraldine Ferraro in 1984 and Palin in 2008, failed to attract a majority of women’s votes.

The most important effect of a vice presidenti­al choice is more subtle: It gives the nominee a chance to send voters a message about what kind of president he or she wants to be.

This will be the most visible decision Biden makes in the campaign, and voters will draw lessons from it.

The first test, of course, is that the No. 2 candidate must appear capable of stepping into the presidency if needed: “Ready on Day One,” as Biden often says.

That’s a cliche every campaign utters, but in this case — with a presidenti­al candidate who is 77 years old — it’s more concrete than usual. He needs to pick someone who can credibly step up.

That’s not the only message Biden’s choice will send. His vice presidenti­al pick is an opportunit­y to reinforce the core themes of his campaign: Competence and steadiness after four years of chaos, plus a promise to heal the nation’s divisions.

If the message he wants to emphasize is racial reconcilia­tion, that will send him toward one of the Black candidates, such as Harris or Demings.

If it’s economic populism and party unity, he might lean toward Warren, who’s popular among progressiv­es.

On the flip side, strategist­s warn that campaigns need to worry about the messages they don’t want to send — in this case, a choice that might bolster Trump’s attack on Democrats as dangerous leftists.

Choosing Warren might lend itself to the Republican message: That Biden will be a Trojan Horse and she will be the real president.

My bet, in line with the convention­al wisdom, is that Harris is his most likely choice, but I’m prepared to be proven wrong.

Biden has said he hopes to name his choice by Aug. 1, 15 days before the Democratic National Convention begins, but he won’t face a penalty if he takes a little longer.

That’s just one more reason to relax and ignore the speculatio­n for a while. If candidate Biden does his job well, his choice will produce one day of drama, and after that, it will hardly matter at all.

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