USA TODAY US Edition

BEST, WORST RUNNING MATE PICKS

The veepstakes is tops for suspense and entertainm­ent. But real impact? It depends.

- Ken Rudin, the former political editor at NPR, is the host of Ken Rudin’s Political Junkie radio program. Ken Rudin

The quadrennia­l season of Survivor: Veepstakes is in its final throes of gossip and suspense. But what will it mean in the end? Does a running mate even matter?

The selection of Geraldine Ferraro by the Democrats in 1984 was seen as one of the most exciting political moments ever, but the Mondale-Ferraro ticket carried just one state and the District of Columbia that November. When Republican Dan Quayle was picked four years later, the choice was widely mocked and ridiculed. Yet when all was said and done, the Bush- Quayle ticket carried 40 out of 50 states.

That’s not to say that the VP pick is inconseque­ntial. True, it’s hard to imagine anyone paying attention to the person who becomes Donald Trump’s number two; The Donald just sucks up all the oxygen wherever he appears. (Though it would be fun to see a Trump-Newt Gingrich ticket, and its combined six current and former wives.) But a lot may be riding on Hillary Clinton’s choice. Does she hope to win a state with her pick? Send a signal to Bernie Sanders supporters? Make history by choosing another woman?

Here are my picks for five best and five worst vice-presidenti­al selections of the last 60 years.

BEST FIVE

1. Lyndon Johnson (Democrat, 1960). If there’s one running mate who may have swung an election, it’s Johnson. The Senate majority leader at the time, his selection arguably allowed John F. Kennedy to win Texas, much of the South, and ultimately the White House.

2. Tied for second: Dick Cheney (Republican, 2000) and Joe Biden (Democrat, 2008). Both gave the top of the ticket exactly what they needed: gravitas and experience. Neither George W. Bush nor Barack Obama had foreign policy chops or allies in Washington. Cheney and Biden supplied both.

4. George H.W. Bush (Republican, 1980). Ronald Reagan was portrayed by the Democrats that year as a right-wing extremist. By choosing Bush, Reagan showed his pragmatic side and silenced the doubters. The move united the party and the ticket swept to a landslide victory.

5. Al Gore (Democrat, 1992). This selection seemed to violate convention­al wisdom. Rather than seek geographic­al, ideologica­l or demographi­c balance, Bill Clinton instead chose someone very similar to himself. There were difference­s, of course; while Clinton had the reputation of being a draft-dodging womanizer, Gore served in Vietnam, and his wife Tipper was a strong promoter of “family values.”

WORST FIVE

1. Spiro Agnew (Republican, 1968). He was picked at a time when vetting potential VP picks was unheard of. But even a cursory investigat­ion of Agnew, the governor of Maryland, would have revealed he spent years steeped in corruption, taking bribes. Nixon clearly liked Agnew’s red-meat rhetoric, which served him well … until his past caught up with him and he was forced to resign.

2. Sarah Palin (Republican, 2008). With outgoing President Bush unpopular and the GOP brand in trouble, John McCain needed to shake up the election. At the time, Palin was a highly popular governor with a reputation for taking on corruption and politics-as-usual in Alaska. It wasn’t until some ill-fated interviews with the national media — notably Katie Couric — that Republican­s realized their nominee was in way over her head.

3. William Miller (Republican, 1964). In fairness, no No. 2 would have been able to help Barry Goldwater defeat Johnson, the incumbent. But when asked why he picked Miller, a New York con- gressman who was head of the House GOP campaign committee — and a leading Johnson critic — Goldwater said, “He drove LBJ nuts.” That’s one way to pick a running mate.

4. Thomas Eagleton (Democrat, 1972). As with Goldwater, no running mate was going to help McGovern defeat President Nixon that year. But the process by which he selected Eagleton, after so many other Democrats said no, was an embarrassm­ent. And it didn’t help that within days of naming Eagleton to the ticket, McGovern learned that the Missouri senator was treated with electro-shock therapy for depression. Eagleton was forced off the ticket after just 18 days.

5. Bob Dole (Republican, 1976). President Gerald Ford needed a take-no-prisoners rightwinge­r with appeal to fans of Ronald Reagan, who had challenged Ford for the nomination and lost. But Dole was widely perceived as little more than a hatchet man, and his performanc­e in the VP debate with Walter Mondale — when he labeled the two World Wars, Korea and Vietnam as “Democrat wars” — was seen as a disaster.

 ?? MARY ALTAFFER, AP ?? Sarah Palin endorses Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump at an Iowa State University rally on Jan. 19, 2016.
MARY ALTAFFER, AP Sarah Palin endorses Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump at an Iowa State University rally on Jan. 19, 2016.

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