
Now that the primary is over, who should Barack Obama pick as VP?
BE-ELECTED
by Chad Rubel
It was 47 months ago today: the headline from the New York Post.
Kerry's Choice
Dem picks Gephardt as VP candidate

photo from NYPost.com
So if pattern falls true once again, we have about a month to see who Barack Obama will pick as his VP candidate.
Kerry let his supporters know by e-mail that he picked John Edwards, not Dick Gephardt, to be his running mate.
You have an idea of the short list, the long list, and the long shots. You have watched, for good or for bad, the pundits obsess over whether Hillary Clinton should be on the ticket. We take no position on that; it's Barack Obama's choice.
But you don't have to worry about such ethics. So let it rip: tell us who you would love to see Obama pick as his VP candidate.
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Veep?
Many Good Suggestions
I go for Richardson
It's All Bullmanure Anyway!
Who should be VP???
Richardson is the Right Choice....
I think another vote for Wesley Clark
Obama's V.P.
VP
Dennis Kucinich for VP
KANSAS GOV. SEBELIUS
I LOVE this idea!
DENNIS KUCINICH
Obama needs Ohio
for V.P.
*Can't* nominate her?
Swift2
HRC for VP
Even higher ....
Dem voters want her as VP 59/35% (including slightly more Obama voters 46/44 %).
http://www.cbsnews.com/htdocs/pdf/may08b-GENERALELECTION.pdf
NOT THIS DEM. VOTER!!!
Guess ...
... that puts you in the 35%.
none
A 'national unity' ticket with Chuck Hagel
Just as a thought experiment, suppose that Barak Obama, with the blessing of a recomposed DNC, picked the real Republican maverick, Chuck Hagel, to run with him on a 'national unity' ticket. Hagel would be McCain's worst nightmare come true.
This high risk decision would require candid explanations, but why not? Together, Obama and Hagel would sweep the Independent vote while most Democrats would remain in the fold and a flood of Republicans would abandon their Bushed-up party -- the new generation of crossover voters, after the infamous Reagan Democrats of the 1980s.
After the election, Chuck Hagel, a veteran and early Iraq War critic, would be given the highly visible -- and politically risky -- mission of working to fix the disasters in Afghanistan and Iraq. He would draw much of the partisan fire, allowing Obama to focus on building a power base, working out bipartisan policies with Congress, and beginning the task of redressing the balance in the Supreme Court.
But the greatest potential of this uncommon alliance is that within the context of a bipartisan, but mostly centrist cabinet, Obama and Hagel together could redraw the political map of the US and reshape US politics for generations -- starting with four consecutive presidential terms between the two of them. That would give them such a strong base that they could attempt the creation of the first major third party since the emergence of the Republican Party.
The potential for deep political recomposition is now so high that they could succeed in birthing a new, centrist party, which would incorporate its own liberal and conservative wings. Let's call it the American Party. Its left and right wings would generally work out policy compromises internally or within the context of primaries, eliminating the main sources of gridlock among Democrats and Republicans: the undue influence of their militant bases, and the corruption of elected official by means of political contributions by vested interests.
Lobbyists could no longer play one side against the other as they do now. They would find themselves in the unenviable position of having to support non-centrist parties (what is left of the Democratic and Republican parties) and their ideological candidates. For corporations, that would not wash too well with the majority of their shareholders, who would be more likely than most to join the American Party.
With its founders alternating in the Oval Office, the American Party would absorb most of the moderates from the Democratic and Republican parties, as well as a majority of current Independents. Independents would cease to form a swing vote since the American Party would occupy the center of the political spectrum and reflect their normal range of sensitivities. Instead, the Democratic and Republican parties, reduced to their core ideological bases, would serve as watchdogs and permanently threaten three-party races if the American Party loses its appeal from the center. But only if it does.
Meanwhile, the American Party would be able to field candidates with lower levels of political financing than those prevailing today, since the challenge would have to come from marginalized parties with limited financial clout. As a result, well-publicized internal debate would tend to substitute for partisan mud-slinging and media ad buys, and its primaries would thus become the main arena for competition between candidates for office. This makes it essential that the American Party adopt highly transparent and uniform procedures for its primaries, as they would carry enormous weight. One of the objectives of this shift would be the rise of the Wonk, displacing the army of overpaid and divisive political consultants. Another would be fully informed debate among primary voters. In this country, that would be tantamount to a revolution.
An official agreement between Obama, Hagel, and the Democrats and Republicans crossing over to the American Party would guarantee that they would alternate on successive presidential tickets. Thus the 2012 ticket would be an American Party Hagel-Obama ticket, followed by Obama-Hagel in 2016 and again Hagel-Obama in 2020. This arrangement could keep an Obama-Hagel duo in power for 16 years, until 2024, and reshape the Congress.
Another benefit of that extraordinary rearrangement would be institutional stability and continuity of policy directions. Foreign relations would finally cease to reflect extreme, benighted domestic agendas. The impact worldwide would be significant, with a very clear perception of unambiguous American national interest, and the end of irrational policy swings. Nothing could accomplish more to dispel the perception of America as a latter-day Brutish Empire. Repairing the ravages of the Bush years might even take less time than generally believed -- especially if the mitigation of global warming becomes the centerpiece of American policy, both domestic and foreign, and this country resumes a true world leadership role.
Would the historic alliance and its dominant party last? Not much longer, I suppose, than its founders' successive terms in office. The American Party should eventually split into two moderate parties, one center-left and the other center-right, which would agree on all the fundamentals and be fully equipped to cooperate with their counterpart across the aisle. Naturally, all the rules that have cemented the old, illegitimate, Democratic-Republican duopoly would have been rewritten to open the door wide to independent candidates and new parties. As to the increasingly dangerous, politicized, and deeply corrupt 'spoils system,' it would have been eliminated with a reform of the federal government. Finally, American democracy could mature into something citizens of rich countries have enjoyed everywhere else for generations -- with obvious benefits that can no longer be hidden from the citizens of this country.
choice for vice
DEAN NICE CHOICE BUT.....
Jim Webb
I AGREE!
Obama vice president pick
Obama's VP
Ron Paul, eh?
Obama's pick for VP
VP Choice
Yes, Webb is good, but....
agree
Tough choice...
BUT WEBB WAS SECRETARY OF THE NAVY, UNDER REAGAN!
It's Gotta Be Wesley Clark
VP
Caroline Kennedy
Robert Wexler
A Kennedy for VP
My pick for VP
Robert Wexler fits your bill and then has some extras.
florida is lost without Hillary's strong support
Bill Richardson
Obama and his Court
WES IS BEST
VP
Wes
Not a general, someone who could govern if necessary
I doubt Obama needs our advice. If he can be president he can make a decision himself.
Colleen Clark
Cambridge, MA