You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Home Front: Politix
Reasons to be skeptical about the "Cond for VP" rumor
2008-04-07
Jim Geraghty, National Review

I'm a fan of Secretary Rice, but there are a lot of reasons to doubt we'll see her on the Republican ticket. One of my McCain guys, reacting to this story, noted that the senator and Rice have interacted cordially and professionally, but it's not like they're close personally. He said she was "not a name that comes up" when the idle chatter turns to running mates.

If McCain wanted a vice president with foreign policy experience (and it's not like it's a weak spot on the candidate), he could pick other figures that add a lot more electorally — Colin Powell, and Gen. David Petraeus, to name two.

Rice has relatively high approval ratings, which is a plus. I wouldn't expect her to single-handedly move much of the African-American vote, nor narrow the gender gap much. She doesn't seem likely to bring over any geographical areas or states, at least at first glance. She's never run for any elected office before.

As national security adviser and secretary of state, Rice worked hard and diligently, taking on Herculean challenges but with limited results. (Not necessarily her fault; you try getting the Palestinians to sign a peace deal with Israel when Hamas runs the Gaza Strip.) She's currently fourth in line to the presidency, and if some dire crisis were to eliminate the elected officials ahead of her, she seems certain to rise to the occasion. But it's hard to argue her three years and change running the State Department have been a cavalcade of shining successes.

Finally, she's been President Bush's right-hand woman for the past seven years and change. If the President's approval rating was at 60 percent, we would be having a different conversation. But when the President's approval rating is about 30 percent, and the incessant mantra of the election is "change", McCain probably won't want someone who's been associated with the foreign policy decisions in Washington for most of a decade.

Second, if this story is true (and you can tell I have my doubts)... doesn't it look a little unseemly for a Secretary of State to be angling for a position on the ticket? Doesn't she have a full plate as is?
Posted by:Mike

#2  the real irony of this is that Obama is a white man that is half black and went to the highly prestigious Punaho high school where the majority of the attendees would have been mixed race. She is a black descendant of slaves who lived in Mississippi during the KKK era.

Yet the black community swoons for Obama and disses Condi as a "plantation mamma". Go figure.
Posted by: Woodrow Slusorong7967   2008-04-07 22:20  

#1  Besides, everyone knows Condi wants to be the next commissioner of the NFL.
Posted by: Eric Jablow   2008-04-07 19:37  

00:00