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Who's Hot for the GOP's No. 2 Spot?
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13696 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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8 / 1988 |
2,604 Words |
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John H. Fund John H. Fund is an editorial writer for the Wall Street
Journal. |
In the 1930s one of the most popular Broadway musicals was the Gershwin brothers' Of Thee I Sing. The story of an American presidential campaign, the play featured a hapless vice president named Throttlebottom. The man wandered through the play, ignored by all. When he applied for a library card, he was turned down because he could not supply two references.
Ever since the founding of the Republic, vice presidents have scorned the office's lack of power and purpose. Thomas Jefferson, a vice president who became president, called the job "the fifth wheel to a handsome coach." Thomas Marshall, vice president under Woodrow Wilson, often told the story of two boys: "One ran away to sea and the other became vice president. Neither was ever heard from again."
Although the office itself is essentially powerless, the vice presidency is a high-profile position that often catapults its occupant onto the national stage. Six of the last eight vice presidents have later gone on to win their party's nomination in their own right (Bush, Mondale, Ford, Nixon, Humphrey and Johnson). And of course, five vice presidents have become president in this century by succeeding to the office upon the death or resignation of the president.
But how much help can a vice-presidential running mate be to a presidential candidate? The noted historian Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., has examined the recent political record and concluded that it is not clear that it really makes much difference whom Michael Dukakis and George Bush choose as their running mates.
He does
... (1995 of 15306 Characters)
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