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The list of names is long -- and so is the list of political considerations.
Vice presidential candidates must be deemed qualified by pundits and politicians, whose instant assessments will fill airwaves and newspapers. Presidential nominees should avoid picking running mates whose skimpy résumés may cast doubt on their judgment.
As the Democratic campaign shows, presidential politics is rough. It would be a gamble to pick someone with little experience in elective politics, like Condoleezza Rice or Wesley Clark.
The VP candidate must be fully vetted to avoid unpleasant surprises about his or her background. After the 1972 Democratic fiasco over the late Tom Eagleton's electric-shock history, candidates began to assign trusted aides to conduct intensive background checks. This process could favor someone who has sought the presidency itself and undergone the accompanying media scrutiny.
The candidate must be able to do well in the vice presidential debate, perhaps the only time except for selection day in which No. 2 gets the political spotlight. It's important to avoid someone who will seem uninformed, inarticulate or weak.
Useful, but hard to calculate. Candidates sometimes use the choice to unite a divided party, as Ronald Reagan did with George H.W. Bush in 1980. It helps for a candidate to bring a state, or region, that might otherwise be lost. Al Gore might have become president eight years ago had he picked Sen. Bob Graham of Florida -- and had he known he would lose that key state and the presidency by 537 votes. A candidate with blue-collar and union support like Dick Gephardt might have helped John Kerry win Ohio in 2004; John Edwards proved unhelpful in his home state of North Carolina. Sometimes, the political help is less tangible: Bill Clinton's choice of Gore in 1992 helped reinforce a sense of generational change. Dick Cheney helped offset George W. Bush's lack of international experience, something Obama might want to do if he is the 2008 Democratic nominee.
The ideal running mate is not only qualified for the presidency but able to perform the traditional vice presidential role of taking the lead in political slugging. "Politics ain't beanbag," Finley Peter Dunne's Mr. Dooley said, but the public seems to prefer having the top candidate avoid the tough stuff. Despite its potential importance, there's little statistical evidence to suggest that most vice presidential choices have been decisive. For example, consider Dan Quayle. The elder George Bush's choice of a running mate in 1988 was widely derided. Yet in the election outcome, it made no apparent difference.
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