
It’s all over but the shouting in the GOP race for the 2024 Presidential nomination. Ron DeSantis, dropped out yesterday, endorsing Trump, and Nikki Haley will get her metaphorical clock cleaned in the New Hampshire primary: there will be no Gene McCarthy-style upset. Now all the speculation is settling in on the question of who Trump would choose to be his running mate. He claims he’s already decided, but who knows what goes on in that dark wilderness he calls a mind? He could be trolling, he could decide on someone else. My interest lies in whether he is capable of making an ethical choice.
Keep in mind that almost all Presidential running-mates have been chosen for reasons that have nothing to do with whether they have the qualifications, leadership ability or character to be an effective President. If they do, its a lucky accident. Even Abe Lincoln ran for his second term with a wildly unqualified VP, Andrew Johnson, as the latter quickly proved upon being elected. The objective served by the VP choice is winning the Presidency for the #1 man on the ballot. Lyndon Johnson was one of the rare VP choices who had the chops to be President, but all the Democrats and Kennedy cared about was that he was popular in Texas: nobody dreamed that he would end up in the White House thanks to Oswald’s marksmanship. More recently, all three of the women placed on the national ticket—Ferraro, Palin, and (ugh) Harris, had no business being there and wouldn’t have been, had they not had two X chromosomes. If the main qualification for Vice-President were, as it should be, the proven capability to be President of the United States, every VP nomination should be an experienced and effective executive in a challenging government job: state governor, mayor of a big city, or head of a major federal department like State, Homeland Security or Defense.
That criteria becomes especially important when, as it will be in 2024, the Presidential candidate (make that “candidates“) is too old and inherently betting against the mortality tables. Lousy President though he turned out to be when elected to the job, George H.W. Bush still was easily qualified for the VP job based on his experience. Reagan, an elderly candidate, made an ethical choice for a running mate. One of the worst and most unethical choices was FDR’s pick for second-in-command in 1944, when he knew he was probably dying. Harry Truman was an irresponsible, unethical choice (FDR had only met him once, and briefly at that, before handing him the slot); the U.S., as it so often has been, was lucky. Harry was up to the job.
I’m interested in surveying the various names being mentioned in various articles and pundit pieces a possible Trump VPs,to determine if any stand out as particularly ethical or unethical choices.
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