July 25, 2008
McCain May Act Soon On VP Pick
Washington Post: Aides Predict Announcement Before Olympics, Which Are Two Weeks Away
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Play CBS Video Video GOP 'Veepstakes' Rumors that Sen. John McCain will soon announce his choice for VP spur a review of likely candidates. Harry Smith talks to Mike Crowley, senior editor of The New Republic magazine.
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Video McCain Irked By Obama Hype John McCain has struggled to be heard during Barack Obama's widely covered overseas tour of the Mideast and Europe. McCain pokes fun at what he calls the media's love affair with Obama in a new ad. Charlie D'Agata reports.
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Video Eye To Eye: McCain On Mideast John McCain talks about his plans for Iraq and Afghanistan and sharply criticizes Barack Obama's understanding of the war on the terror. McCain also addresses criticism of favoritism in the media.
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Republican presidential candidate, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., reacts to the audience's applause as he makes a campaign stop at the LIVESTRONG Summit at The Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio, Thursday, July 24, 2008. (AP)
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In-Depth VP Hot Sheet: McCain CBSNews.com ranks the top contenders to be McCain's running mate.
Anxious to counter the blanket media coverage that has followed Sen. Barack Obama on his overseas journey, Sen. John McCain is weighing whether to announce his running mate in the coming weeks before the spotlight shifts to China and the opening of the Olympic Games next month.
"He's in a position to make [the decision] on short notice if he wanted to," said Charles R. Black Jr., one of McCain's top political advisers.
Two top aides to the presumptive Republican nominee said the decision is likely to be announced after Obama returns from Europe on Sunday and before the Beijing Olympics begin Aug. 8. They said the campaign fears that unanticipated events coming out of China -- whether in the form of athletic accomplishments or human rights protests -- could deflect attention from the announcement if it were made during the Games.
The Olympics conclude the day before the Democratic nominating convention opens in Denver, and the GOP convention begins in Minneapolis-St. Paul just four days after the Democratic gathering ends.
Aides to the most likely candidates to join McCain on the ticket, meanwhile, offered terse "no comment" replies when asked whether they have been asked to provide documents that the campaign can use to vet backgrounds.
The list of likely contenders includes former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, former U.S. budget director Rob Portman and former Pennsylvania governor Tom Ridge.
Asked several questions about the selection process, Romney spokesman Eric Fehrnstrom repeatedly declined to comment. Representatives for Portman, Jindal and Pawlenty also would not say whether they have provided documents to McCain aides.VP Hot Sheet: McCain
CBSNews.com tracks the veepstakes buzz and ranks the top contenders. See who's number 1!
Ridge, a close friend of McCain's, said in an interview that he has had no conversations with the senator or his staff about being a running mate.
"I have not. I can only be interested if John is," Ridge said Tuesday. "I'm not lobbying for it. I'm not seeking it."
Ridge, who was first elected to Congress in 1982, at the same time McCain came to Washington, bonded with the Arizona Republican as a fellow Vietnam War veteran. He has been considered as a potential running mate before, providing vetting documents during the 2000 campaign to Richard B. Cheney, who was handling the selection process for then-Texas Gov. George W. Bush.
In the end, it was Cheney who was chosen.
This year, McCain has tapped Arthur B. Culvahouse Jr., chairman of the Washington law firm O'Melveny & Meyers and a counsel to President Ronald Reagan, to oversee the selection of a running mate. Culvahouse has declined requests to comment, and McCain has been circumspect on the topic.
"I can't comment on it," McCain told reporters as he traveled through Wisconsin last week. He promised to describe his search process after it is over, declining to elaborate befor then. "I don't think it's fair to the people we are considering," he said.
Asked this week about Pawlenty, McCain again declined to comment on the governor's standing in the search but quickly ticked off a list of attributes that would argue for his selection.
"He's a great, fine person," McCain said. "Reelected in one of the toughest reelection years in the history of the Republican Party. His father, I am pretty sure, drove a truck. He has been pretty successfully . . . able to work across the aisle in Minnesota with the Democrats."
Pawlenty was in Washington this week, conducting media interviews on behalf of McCain and attending what the campaign described as "meetings" at McCain's national headquarters in Arlington. Portman accompanied McCain to a fundraiser in Columbus, Ohio, yesterday.
Jindal appeared on Fox News this week to tamp down expectations, telling "Fox & Friends" that he intends to remain governor of Louisiana, a job he has held only since January.
"Let me be clear: I have said in every private and public conversation, I've got the job that I want," Jindal said. "And I'll say again on air: I'm not going to be the vice presidential nominee or vice president. I'm going to help Senator McCain get elected, as governor of Louisiana."
Aides said Romney is vacationing this week with his family on the Canadian side of Lake Huron and is scheduled to be at his home in Wolfeboro, N.H., next week.
"What I can say is that there is a lot of guessing and speculation going on," Fehrnstrom said. "Governor Romney expects to be campaigning for Senator McCain as a supporter of the ticket, not a member of the ticket."
The timing of McCain's announcement has been hotly debated within the Republican Party as he and Obama eye a calendar that is tightly packed with major national and international events.
This week, syndicated columnist Robert D. Novak wrote that McCain was poised to make an announcement before week's end, but Novak later complained that he may have been used by aides to the McCain campaign to gin up attention for their candidate. If it was a ploy, it worked, as speculation about McCain's vice presidential choice provided a rare news breakthrough for the senator during Obama's overseas trip.
Many Republicans say the traditional time frame for an announcement -- the days leading up to the GOP convention -- is not practical this year, because the Democratic convention ends so soon before the Republican gathering. It's unlikely, they said, that McCain would announce his pick the day after Obama gives his convention speech.
And several McCain aides said they oppose the idea of making a vice presidential announcement during the Olympics.
"It's not that it wouldn't get covered. But if you are looking for a calm sea and no waves . . . you don't do it during the Olympics," said one senior Republican adviser.
"We don't know when some breakthrough performance will happen," the adviser said. "All sorts of news can come. . . . What if there's some sort of human rights protest?"
washingtonpost.com staff writer Chris Cillizza contributed to this report.
By Michael D. Shear and Robert Barnes
© 2008 The Washington Post Company


VP Hot Sheet: McCain
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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See all 99 CommentsPosted by MaryanneAZ at 05:05 PM : Jul 26, 200
I know and I believe everyone knows Mitt Romney will be it, he is the only one hungry enough to put his egotistical self in the mix, he tried to buy the presidency. I don''t care who he picks really a woman wouldn''t make him a choice for me
I voted for Hillary Clinton in the primaries, and although an astounding good choice, I doubt it would work. I don''t think Colin Powell would work either, although another good pick. His connection to the Bush White House would not help. And being from Massachusetts, I think Mitt Romney is another bad choice; he has too much old baggage.
John McCain needs a younger person, with a "fresh" look, and somnone to can help make some "sparks fly" on the campaign trail. Senator McCain needs to take back the "Maverick" title he so well deserves and show his stuff.
Thanks for listening.
Alan Dennen
I believe it would be a Maverick move to choose Hillary Clinton as VP and take away from Babama the majority of the democratic votes and in the end the conservative republicans will have to live with it.
Would that be Maverick?
A McCain/Clinton ticket?
I love it!
Check this out from one of your own
http://www.slate.com/id/2195914/#latedict
Ha
13% of women under 26 voted last presidential election. Think about it.
70% of people over 65 vote. Guess who elects the President and the Senate.
If you want real change, elect 65 or 70 Democrats to the Senate.
In case you didnt know, nothing real gets done in the Senate because without a big majority, either side can just talk the day away until there is a crisis and no money to fund anything.
More than half the women under 26 dont even register to vote.
Your civil rights will be decided by the next choice of Supreme court Justice. Cant you get it together to register and then really vote, just this once? Only 60% of registered voters bothered to show up, the last election, which was decided by the Amish farmers in Ohio. Millions of people dont even register. Come on gals, show up and act like citizens, just this once. We need you. You need you. Please.
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Posted by KYJurisDocto at 05:40 PM : Jul 25, 2008
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Powell''s views on Iraq and the middle east are more closely in step with Obama''s than McCains. Besides, then you have a president and a VP with absolutely no experience on the economy, or any thing elso other than war and foreign affairs. I think most Americans are a lot more worried about their mortgage than they are about a terrorist jumping out of the bushes.
Just ask Bill O''Reilly and McCain. They know.
What a crock of bias we are being fed by the media. Why do they feel they have to even give air time to such spin?
The price of gas has gone up because the value of the dollar under Bush has gone down by 50%. When Bush took power and started his war on civil rights, the Euro was worth 70 cents. Now a Euro is worth $1.60.
That means the real cost of OIL denominated in Euro''s is unchanged.
Only US dollars are worth LESS.
90% of the damage was done in BUSH''s first six years in the three congressional terms before Pelosi took power of Congress, and every important bill she got passed, in the past year, BUSH veto''d.
" Pay attention to me, I might pick my VP candidate. He might be Powell, who is as old as I am, but still has his faculties"
Thanks for the non-information. Stop b.s.''ing yourself and us with this non-news CBS, PLEASE.
WHACH''''U HUNGRY FOR?
FOR WHAT....MORE O''''BAMMA WIENERS?
Posted by tiddsanbeer at 04:50 PM : Jul 25, 2008
Fox News ISN''T BIASED!!!!
HAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!!
Posted by bretster7 at 04:48 PM : Jul 25, 2008
I''ll answer you question, with a question:
"What happened in Cheney''s top secret energy meetings with the big oil executives?"
Posted by bretster7 at 04:48 PM : Jul 25, 2008
I don''t know where you get your math skills OR information from:
109th Congress:
231 republicans
201 democrats
senate:
55 republicans
44 democrats
108th Congress:
228 republicans
206 democrats
senate:
51 republicans
48 democrats
They had a one vote majority until Jumpin Jim Jeffords left the party. Then Cheny would cast a deciding vote if it came down to it. It did not. The so called Republican led congress, had a lot of help from the other side of the isle
Congress COULD HAVE launched an investigation, but they VOLUNTARILY chose not to.
Congress has looked into price gouging THREE times and they did not find any evidence, the last two times it was by a Democratic controlled congress. BTW when Pelosi took over gas was $2 65 a gallon, it has increased by more since the dems took control, How do you explain that one
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See all 99 Comments