Who will Trump pick for vice president if he wins? These are the candidates of the pools

The former US president contradicts himself in his statements about his running mate. Possibilities remain open





Donald Trump, with South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem, in an image from 2018.
Photo: SUSAN WALSH (AP/ LAPRESSE) | IMG: EPV

Donald Trump and Joe Biden have swept Super Tuesday and have effectively secured the nomination. With more than four months left until the Republican convention, the main unknown about the United States presidential elections in November is who the former president will choose to accompany him on the ballot. It is often said that vice presidential candidates do not win elections, although if they are decided in a handful of states and, perhaps, by a few tens of thousands of votes, they can make a difference. The former president has given contradictory clues about his plans, but the pools circulate incessantly. They have a small flaw: too many names.





Trump, in complete control of the Republican Party, has suitors swarming. When asked, he goes off on a tangent. At a town hall hosted by Fox News in Des Moines on Jan. 10, before the Iowa caucuses , he replied: “I can’t really tell you. I mean, I know who it’s going to be,” he replied.





On that same conservative network, they asked him again in New Hampshire after the primaries and it was not so clear that he had already decided: “I may announce something in the next couple of months or I may not. There is no rush for it. It won’t have any impact. The person I think I like is a very good person, pretty standard. I think people won’t be that surprised, but I would say there’s probably a 25% chance it’s that person,” he replied on January 24.





Trump gave another interview to Fox News on February 4 and was asked when he was going to announce it: “Not for a while.” But has he decided? “I have a lot of good ideas, but I haven’t…” Has he told you already? “I talk to everyone,” he replied, dropping the name of Tim Scott, the only black Republican senator. Could it be Tim Scott, then? “It could be a lot of people,” he castled.





Last week, after the border visit in Eagle Pass, he was asked in another interview—on Fox News, you guessed it—if Texas Governor Greg Abbott was on the list of finalists and he responded: “Absolutely.” “He has done a great job. Yes, he would certainly be someone he would take into account,” he replied, perhaps out of courtesy, with Abbott at his side.





In 2016, Trump chose Mike Pence the week before the convention. In 2020, Joe Biden did the same with Kamala Harris, who repeats as the Democrat’s running mate in November. It is the most common, and if Trump repeats that schedule we will have to wait until July (the Republican convention is from the 15th to the 19th of that month).





Supplementary candidate

Personal harmony, popularity and political interest are the factors that usually influence the decision. It is common to choose someone who complements the candidate and covers some of his or her shortcomings. In 2016, in the midst of scandals over his sexist statements and doubts about his integrity, Trump chose Pence, who defined himself as “a Christian, a conservative and a Republican, in that order” and of whom the former president even said that he was “too honest.”





Sometimes a partner is chosen to help win a state or to strengthen the candidacy in groups of voters where the candidate is weak. That leads many to bet that in the end it will be a woman, an African-American or someone relatively young. But after the desert journey that Trump overcame, personal loyalty is another ingredient to put in the shaker, someone who is MAGA enough [for Make America Great Again , Trump’s motto]. This past weekend, with a joke included, he uttered a phrase that defines him in that sense: “You know Argentina, great guy. Love Trump. He’s a great Trump guy. I love him because he loves Trump. When he called, I picked up the call. “I like everyone who loves me,” he said in apparent reference to the Argentine president, Javier Milei.





With all this, the list is endless. Of those who have competed against Trump in the primaries, it is worth ruling out Chris Christie, hostile from the beginning, but also Ron DeSantis, who suffered a humiliating defeat, and Nikki Haley, with whom the confrontation has reached personal levels. Instead, entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, a millennial Trumpist, and Tim Scott, senator from South Carolina, are trying to openly claim credit . Trump has called Scott “a tiger” and that he has campaigned much better for the former president than he did for himself in his short and unsuccessful primary race. Some media even handle the possibility of rich businessman Doug Burgum, governor of North Dakota, who fell at the first opportunity and whom Trump has praised as a businessman.





There is a group of women very loyal to Trump who have made a splash. Among them are New York Congresswoman Elise Stefanik and Georgia Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, although both have a markedly ultra-conservative profile that can scare away moderate voters. In addition to Greene , Kari Lake, a former television presenter and former candidate for governor of Arizona (one of the uncertain states), and Kristi Noem, governor of South Dakota, who also allows herself to be loved, have campaigned for Trump since the Iowa caucuses. and he has said that he would accept the proposal “in the blink of an eye.” Her name has been floating around since Trump held a rally with her in September. An option that has emerged strongly (and who has run) is the former congresswoman from Hawaii, ex-military and political commentator Tulsi Gabbard. When Trump was asked a few names that included her, she replied: “All those people are good. “They are all solid.”





Another Trumpist who was his spokesperson and is currently governor of Arkansas has also been mentioned: Sarah Huckabee Sanders. At 41, she is the youngest governor in the country and like Noem, 52, she can connect with part of the suburban female electorate, where Trump is weak. Although less Trumpist and probably with fewer options, Alabama Senator Katie Britt has joined the group , who has been commissioned to respond to Biden after the State of the Union speech this Thursday. Another Republican politician who has experienced a conversion to Trumpism after harshly condemning the former president for her role in the assault on the Capitol is Nancy Mace, who has a strong media profile and can connect with voters.





Among African Americans, in addition to Tim Scott, another black congressman who appears in the pools is Byron Donalds, 45, a representative from Florida, a rising star in the Republican Party who has also said that he would accept the proposal without hesitation. And the option of Ben Carson is also being considered , who was his Secretary of Housing, remained loyal to Trump and is very well regarded by conservative and evangelical voters. It has been heard less, but it is also cited by one of the major media outlets, Wesley Hunt, a 42-year-old former Apache helicopter pilot and black congressman from Texas.





Long-serving political veterans such as Florida’s two senators, Marco Rubio and Rick Scott, Texas Governor Greg Abbott, and Trump’s former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo have also been quoted by the media, as has John Ratcliffe, who was Trump’s Director of Intelligence. Another staunch Trumpist who can connect with voters in the areas that will define the outcome is Ohio Senator JD Vance.





As if that were not enough, the controversial ultra-conservative television host Tucker Carlson is added to the list, fired from Fox after the agreement in which the television paid 787 million dollars (about 720 million euros) for a defamation lawsuit, which He has good rapport with Trump.





All these names add up to 21 candidates, assuming Trump doesn’t pull a rabbit out of his hat. At the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) a little over two weeks ago, which was a kind of merit contest, attendees showed their preferences. Kristi Noem and Ramaswamy each achieved 15% of the vote, with Tulsi Gabbard third (9%), followed by Elise Stefanik and Tim Scott, with 8% each. Byron Donalds got 7%; Kari Lake, 6%, and Ben Carson and Sarah Huckabee Sanders, 5% each. Below were Tucker Carlson, Marjorie Taylor Greene and JD Vance.





Trump, in any case, is one of those who believes that he will win or lose the elections and that it does not matter much who accompanies him. “Well, actually, it’s never had much of an effect on an election,” he said. Only he knows who he will choose. Or maybe not even himself.





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