PERHAPS JOE BIDEN’S MOST IMPORTANT DECISION
In due course, we’ll weigh in on prospective candidates. Pundits are floating about a dozen names. With the pick not
expected until late next month at the earliest, we’ll have time to comment on the pros and cons of possible choices. For now, we focus on what Biden should look for, not who.
The unique circumstances in 2020 make this selection that much more important. If
elected, Biden would take office at age 78, older than any person ever upon first inauguration. He has hinted he wouldn’t seek a second term, putting his vice president in prime position to succeed him. Since the Second World War, six vice presidents have gone on to become president. In that same period, no major party has denied the presidential nomination to a vice president or former vice president who sought it.
So, what qualities should Biden seek? We each made lists and factored them together, arriving at a four-part test we now present in no particular order. Each of us may assign more importance to one or another of these traits, but we really want someone with all of them.
Electability: You can’t Save Souls in an Empty Church
All three of us recognize the vice presidential candidate must help Biden
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The research on how much a vice presidential candidate can help presents
a mixed bag. A few studies say the second banana can make up to a three-percentage point difference. Others say it’s less, if any.
There’s disagreement about whether a vice presidential candidate can help carry a particular state, especially the candidate’s home state. John Kennedy – and most analysts of the 1960 election – believed Lyndon Johnson secured Texas for the Democrats that year. Some think Tim Kaine helped Hillary Clinton carry Virginia in 2016. On the other hand, Lloyd Bentsen couldn’t help Michal Dukakis win Texas in 1988. John Edwards didn’t claim North Carolina for John Kerry in 2004.
The Ready-to-Play Test: Can She Be President?
Henry states this as a matter of “experience in governance.” For Rob, it’s “gravitas” – can we envision the vice president as commander-in-chief, confronting a foreign crisis (or a national pandemic)? In the event of Biden’s death or incapacity, could the new or acting president rally the nation to a cause?
John McCain paid a huge price for picking someone unprepared for national office in Sarah Palin. Though she gave McCain an initial boost in the polls, the more exposure Palin got, the worse the choice looked.
Some of the women being suggested as possible running mates for Biden don’t offer the kind of resumes vice presidential candidates historically present. They’ve only served as state legislators, been mayors, or briefly held
congressional seats. Only one or two have foreign policy experience. We know the paper resume doesn’t mean everything, but it has some importance.
Compatibility: Are They on Same Page?
Restorative Capacity: Putting the Country Back Together
Even if the coronavirus hadn’t ravaged the nation’s health and its economy, any Democrat elected in 2020 would face a monumental job in restoring the country's moral authority. Diminished respect for the
rule of law, broken foreign alliances, mistrust based on ethnicity and hyper partisanship represent just some of the intangibles a new administration will face. The pandemic won’t have gone away by January 2021. A new vice president may have a big role in helping with the remaining economic and public health consequences.
Woodson says he wants a vice presidential candidate who can “relate to a broad coalition of people.” The vice president will need that capacity in helping Biden restore America’s place
and standing in the world. She must help the president bring together a cross-section of America in support of the reclamation project the next administration must undertake.
Our criteria ask a lot of potential vice presidents, but we don’t think we ask too much. Biden, if he wins, will have a big job. The woman on his wing will have a lot to do.
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