The Palm Beach Post

Vice presidenti­al candidates offer low-key contrasts

- JONATHAN BERNSTEIN, WASHINGTON Editor’s note: Jonathan Bernstein writes for Bloomberg View.

The most important thing about the vice presidenti­al debate was what didn’t happen.

Neither Indiana Gov. Mike Pence nor Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine was pressed at all on his qualificat­ions for the job, or on his readiness to become president if necessary. Nor was either candidate required to answer for any personal scandal. And, with minor exceptions, neither candidate had to defend his record in public office, or what he has said on the campaign trail.

That’s because both of them are widely perceived as well-qualified, scandal-free and relatively noncontrov­ersial. (The biggest vulnerabil­ity either of them has is probably Pence’s fairly extreme record on social issues, but it’s not much of an electoral issue because he’s effectivel­y aligned with his party.)

If “do no harm” is the first campaign requiremen­t for a running mate — and it is — it’s worth stepping back a moment to credit both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump for making first-rate choices.

As far as what did happen on Tuesday night, there was nothing of electoral importance. It’s hard to believe that any significan­t number of votes will be moved by this debate — that would be consistent with the history of these vice presidenti­al contests.

Was there a winner? I’ll quote two pundits who I think were on to something.

National Review’s Rich Lowry said: “Kaine strategy — lose debate but quote Trump a lot; Pence strategy — win debate but don’t defend Trump.” Kaine came ready to attack, and Pence came ready to reassure anyone watching that the Trump-Pence ticket was far more discipline­d and in control than it seemed when Trump was on the debate stage.

Which leads to Vox’s Ezra Klein, who tweeted: “It sort of works in the debate, but Pence shaking head, saying ‘no he hasn’t’ is going to look bad in ads next to Trump saying those things.”

Pence was a bit more polished as a debater, perhaps, but he also produced the closest thing to a gaffe — complainin­g, after Kaine quoted one of Trump’s bigoted remarks for the fourth or fifth time, that Kaine had “whipped out that Mexican thing again.”

But overall, neither the “win the debate” nor the “land attacks on the candidate” strategy is likely to change what any voter decides to do.

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