Marco Rubio the favorite VP choice of Chicago CPAC attendees
(CBS News) ROSEMONT, Ill. - Florida Sen. Marco Rubio was the undisputed favorite vice presidential choice of conservative activists gathered for the Chicago Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), receiving 30 percent of a straw poll vote that asked attendees who they would like to see as Mitt Romney's running mate this fall.
Rubio - who did not speak at the conference - was followed by New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie with 14 percent and Rep. Paul Ryan, with 9 percent of the vote. Fourth and fifth place went to Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul and Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal (who spoke to the crowd Friday afternoon) respectively.
Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell, who spoke to the crowd Friday afternoon, and Ohio Sen. Rob Portman, a top-mentioned VP possibility who did not attend the conference, both received less than 2 percent of the vote.
Only 17 percent thought the top criteria should be qualification to lead the country, and just 4 percent said Romney should pick a running mate from a key state.
The straw poll, which featured 23 prominent Republicans as choices on the poll, was co-sponsored by The Washington Times; 520 people at the conference voted out of well over 1,000 in attendance at the height of the conference.
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McDonnell talks up Romney at CPAC
Jindal: Obama "most liberal, most incompetent" president since Carter
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