Posted by
Brian John Murphy on Saturday, August 23, 2008 12:00:00 AM
So it wasn’t Hillary.
Senator Joe “Is
This Mike On?” Biden has been picked by Barack Obama to be his running mate. If
nothing else, Biden is insurance against the possibility of Senator Obama
developing laryngitis.
Joe Biden has a
well-deserved reputation of being a chatterbox. He may not exceed the verbiage
produced by the all-time champ, the late Vice President Hubert H. “I’m Happy to
Be Here” Humphrey, but no one living has so perfectly motorized a mouth.
On the plus
side, Senator Biden is a well-regarded Senate veteran. If Obama is elected he
will be able to liaison with the upper chamber very effectively. Biden is also
expert in foreign affairs, although his idea to split Iraq up into a federation
of independent states won no salute when he ran it up the proverbial flagpole.
It must also be
admitted that Sen. Biden occasionally puts his foot in his mouth. Plagiarizing
a speech by British politician Neal Kinnock, when Biden first sought the
democratic nomination, was not his finest hour.
Nor was it a
triumph when he said of Obama in January of last year, “I mean, you got the
first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a
nice-looking guy,” he said. “I mean, that’s a storybook, man.”
That doesn’t
work on so many levels. The first mainstream African-American who is articulate
and bright and clean? What is Jesse Jackson, then? Or Colin Powell? Or
Condoleeza Rice? How do they fail to be articulate, bright and clean? Describing black men and women is a subtle
put-down, inferring that blacks, as a people are somehow deficient in
intelligence or language skills.
But “clean” was
Biden’s adjectival crusher. The other African-American politicians of our time
are unclean? Does Biden mean in terms of physical hygiene or does he
mean “clean” in terms of honesty and integrity? However he means it, it is a
devastatingly racist thing to say. Next thing you know he will be making jokes
about convenience store clerks from India…
Perhaps the best thing about Joe Biden is that he is not Hillary Clinton –at
least if you, dear reader, wish to have Obama win this election.
Hillary was a
trap, a temptation that Obama probably did not have a lot of trouble resisting.
Aside from the fact that he fails to find any affinity for her; there is also
her baggage.
Hillary would
bring to the campaign a lot of unanswered questions about her behavior during
the eight years of her husband’s presidency. Old issues would be dredged up,
washed off and put on the table again.
Hillary’s hub,
ex-President Clinton, would also distract attention from Obama’s message.
Everything he would say in public would be weighed to see if he was truly
“enthusiastically” supporting Obama or damning him with faint praise –or
outright criticism. This would happen quite a bit because right after Joe
Biden, Bill Clinton is the biggest motor mouth in politics. The campaign would
be about the Clintons, not Obama.
Now it is John
McCain’s turn to decide on a vice presidential running mate. If he’s smart he
will announce the name right after this week’s Democratic Convention ends, to
steal the publicity from Obama on what should be his biggest day of “bounce.”
I propose he
nominate General David Petraeus. Petraeus turned a losing war into a victory,
so we know he’s got a good head on his shoulders. Or, if he had not already
been co-opted by the Obama campaign, Colin Powell.
Condi Rice would
be a good choice, as would be Mike Huckabee. Condi Rice, the first black woman
nominee, is extremely qualified for the job having been National Security
advisor and Secretary of State. Huckabee, the former Arkansas governor, is a
conservative with solid evangelical support.
And then there
is Mitt.
Don’t get me
wrong; I personally like Mitt Romney. He looks presidential. Even if
can’t deliver Massachusetts for McCain he might be able to deliver Michigan,
where dad George Romney is fondly remembered. He is a successful businessman
whose acumen played a big role in saving the Salt Lake City Winter Olympics. He
brings economic credibility to the ticket.
Mitt, a Mormon,
does not play well with evangelicals, however. And this is a year when McCain
cannot afford to alienate his base. Also, Mitt’s conversion to conservatism is
quite recent and reeks of expediency. I hope he finds being pro-life and
pro-capital punishment to be at least refreshingly different.
Finally, if the
primary season this year proved anything, it proved that Romney is not a
winner. Therefore, without hesitation, I predict McCain will pick Romney, if
only to be contrary.
It’s a good
thing that in the end, voters really don’t care or even remember who the vice
presidential picks were come November.