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- <text id=92TT1523>
- <title>
- July 06, 1992: V.P.:Spelling Out the Job Specs
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- July 06, 1992 Pills for the Mind
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- VICE PRESIDENTS, Page 30
- Spelling Out The Job Specs
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The next big challenge for both Clinton and Perot is selecting a
- running mate
- </p>
- <p>By WALTER SHAPIRO
- </p>
- <p> Retiring New Hampshire Senator Warren Rudman, who vaulted to
- folk-hero status when he announced he was leaving Congress in
- frustration over the deficit, laughs at the question. Why is he
- suddenly on the lists as everyone's prototypical Vice President
- -- both Democrat Bill Clinton's and independent Ross Perot's?
- "Because they don't know me," Rudman cracks. "If you pressed me,
- I suppose it's because I have credibility as someone with
- integrity and as a square shooter. And for a Republican, I'm not
- highly partisan."
- </p>
- <p> Rudman, in short, offers the rarest of commodities in the
- current vice-presidential veepstakes -- Washington experience
- coupled with the image of a truth-telling outsider. For in the
- latest irony in a peculiar political year, both Clinton and
- Perot have been musing about similar -- even identical --
- vice-presidential nominees. As political analyst Kevin Phillips
- puts it, "What Perot needs in a Vice President is someone who's
- political, yet puts the finger in the eye of the politicians.
- Someone like Rudman. And Clinton too needs a running mate who
- reinforces his outsider status with Perot swing voters."
- </p>
- <p> The problem with this speculation is that Rudman himself is
- not available. "I would not serve as a Vice President for anyone
- ever," he declares. Another crossover name is Colin Powell. But
- again the same pitfall: there are no signs that the Chairman of
- the Joint Chiefs of Staff wants to be the first black candidate
- on anyone's national ticket.
- </p>
- <p> For Clinton, still running third in the national polls, the
- vice-presidential choice represents his best opportunity to put
- his campaign back on track. The stakes are even higher for
- Perot, who needs to prove that he can govern without the benefit
- of a political party. But Perot also risks jeopardizing his
- all-things-to-all-voters appeal if he selects a Vice President
- who comes complete with heavy ideological baggage.
- </p>
- <p> Jack Kemp, George Bush's disgruntled Secretary of Housing
- and Urban Development, is one name being pushed hard in Perot
- circles. New York leveraged-buyout specialist Theodore
- Forstmann, a Kemp presidential fund raiser in 1988, is trying to
- broker a marriage between Kemp and Perot. Some of Kemp's
- political advisers argue that running with Perot represents
- Kemp's best chance to be elected President himself in 1996.
- Others counsel caution -- Kemp's favored political style --
- contending that bolting the g.o.p. would permanently brand the
- supply-side conservative a pariah. Kemp's probable reluctance
- illustrates Perot's quandary in finding a credible running mate
- willing to risk his political career on one roll of the dice.
- </p>
- <p> Third-party candidates often stumble badly in their quest
- for a plausible No. 2. Remember General Curtis ("Bomb Them Back
- to the Stone Age") LeMay, George Wallace's 1968 ticket mate?
- Perot has already tapped retired Admiral James Stockdale, a
- conservative former Vietnam pow, as his stand-in running mate
- to get on the ballot in all 50 states. Perot calls Stockdale
- his "fail-safe fallback" and has said that he will, if
- necessary, "just go with the team we have."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton may make his final decision this week when he heads
- off on vacation (destination: top secret) with his wife Hillary.
- So far, Clinton has kept his short list of prospects under tight
- wraps. But the factors shaping Clinton's choice are likely to
- include:
- </p>
- <p> Geography: Gone are the days when regional balance was the
- holy grail of vice-presidential selection. Clinton's polls show
- that only New York's reluctant Governor Mario Cuomo helps the
- ticket nationwide. That is why part of the calculus involves
- searching for a running mate who would at minimum help Clinton
- carry one major state. Some of the possibilities with the right
- zip code include: Cuomo, Texas Governor Ann Richards,
- Pennsylvania Senator Harris Wofford and Senator Paul Simon of
- Illinois.
- </p>
- <p> Image: With Perot in the race, Clinton risks forsaking his
- outsider credentials if he picks a running mate too tied to the
- Washington status quo. "People sense that Bill Clinton is a
- little too slick," says a campaign insider. "So it would make
- sense for him to have someone a little rough around the edges."
- But who has both an unorthodox flair and the political heft to
- burnish the ticket? The short list includes: Richards (the
- funniest political put-down artist in Democratic politics);
- Wofford (at 66, an elder-statesman type newly elected to the
- Senate); and freshman Connecticut Senator Joseph Lieberman (an
- orthodox Jew who does not campaign on Saturdays).
- </p>
- <p> Security: From the revelation of Tom Eagleton's electroshock
- treatments in 1972 to the disclosure of Geraldine Ferraro's
- tangled finances in 1984, the Democrats have a history of
- star-crossed vice-presidential nominees. That is why the safest
- choice might be someone who has already been tested in a
- national campaign, like the trio of 1988 presidential contenders
- -- Tennessee Senator Al Gore, House majority leader Richard
- Gephardt and Simon. Gore, a hot prospect on the Washington rumor
- mill, would add needed foreign-policy expertise to the ticket.
- </p>
- <p> Back in 1968, Richard Nixon offered the axiom, "A Vice
- President cannot help you, he can only hurt you." That insight,
- of course, did not prevent Nixon from choosing Spiro Agnew, but
- in the veepstakes risk often outweighs reward. Yet for Clinton
- and Perot selecting a Vice President will be a true defining
- moment. That one choice will symbolize who they are, what they
- represent and the type of people they hope to bring into their
- Administration. That's why one can imagine in Hollywood fashion
- both Clinton and Perot shouting to their aides, "Get me someone
- like Warren Rudman."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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