Donald Trump’s vice presidential choice takes on an additional significance in shooting’s aftermath
Image via AP.

Donald Trump
Trump waiting until the convention to choose a running mate is later than usual for recent cycles but is hardly unprecedented.

A defiant Donald Trump, having just survived an attempted assassination, enters the Republican National Convention (RNC) having not yet announced his vice presidential pick.

It remains unclear whether the shooting Saturday at his Pennsylvania rally has changed the former President’s thinking about his potential second-in-command. But his choice now carries considerably more gravity. If a bullet had struck just a little bit to the right, Trump likely would have been killed or seriously injured.

The close call puts in stark relief the significance of a position that is a heartbeat away from the presidency. Trump has repeatedly claimed that choosing someone who was qualified to take over as Commander in Chief was his top consideration for the role.

“You need somebody that can be good just in case, that horrible just in case,” he said in an interview with “The Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Show” in May.

Hours before the shooting, in an interview before he boarded his plane from Florida, he told Fox News Channel’s Harris Faulkner, “It’s a very important position, especially if something bad should happen — that’s the most important.”

Those on Trump’s shortlist have differing levels of governing experience. Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance, for instance, has been in office less than two years, while North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum helms a state with a population (780,000 people) smaller than Columbus, Ohio (908,000). Florida Sen. Marco Rubio has been in politics for decades and is in his third term in the Senate.

Before the shooting, Trump had made clear that he wanted to dramatically reveal his pick at the convention, which he said would make it more “interesting” and “exciting.”

“It’s like a highly sophisticated version of ‘The Apprentice,’” he quipped in a radio interview last week, referring to the show he once hosted that featured him firing contestants on camera.

He could announce the pick Monday. But he’s also raised the idea of waiting until later in the week.

Trump and convention organizers have said the RNC’s schedule will go on as planned despite the shooting, with Trump writing on his social media site that he could not “allow a ‘shooter,’ or potential assassin, to force change to scheduling, or anything else.”

“In this moment, it is more important than ever that we stand United, and show our True Character as Americans, remaining Strong and Determined, and not allowing Evil to Win,” he wrote.

He held meetings in the days before the shooting with the top contenders. All have submitted material, including bios and photographs, to convention organizers that can be used to prepare content if they’re picked, according to multiple people familiar with the conversations who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the secretive process.

The private meetings with Vance, Rubio and Burgum were first reported by ABC News.

Nothing was offered during the meetings, one of the people said.

There’s some historical precedent for waiting until the convention

Trump waiting until the convention to choose a running mate is later than usual for recent cycles but is hardly unprecedented.

In 1980, Ronald Reagan negotiated with former President Gerald Ford for hours during the Republican convention in Detroit but settled on his former Primary rival George H.W. Bush when those discussions collapsed. Reagan cut it so close that his decision came less than 24 hours before he formally accepted the GOP nomination.

Bush himself waited until the 1988 Republican convention in New Orleans before shocking many attendees — as well as some of the then-Vice President’s own top advisers — by picking little-known Indiana Sen. Dan Quayle to be his No. 2, rather than a more established running mate.

Since then, though, the tradition has been to pick a running mate shortly before the candidate’s party’s convention opens.

In 2008, Arizona Sen. John McCain, looking for a way to reset his race against Democrat Barack Obama, picked little-known Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin shortly before the Republican convention opened in Minnesota. He got a bump in the polls that didn’t last.

Democrat Joe Biden tapped then-California Sen. Kamala Harris as his running mate six days before his party opened its convention, which was held mostly virtually due to the coronavirus pandemic. And Trump chose Indiana Gov. Mike Pence in the days before the 2016 Republican convention opened in Cleveland.

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Republished with permission of The Associated Press.

Associated Press


5 comments

  • Dont Say FLA

    July 15, 2024 at 8:59 am

    Thank you for using “shooting” in the headline rather than “assassination attempt.” This was nothing but a normal everyday mass shooting in USA. Bullied kid gets mom and dads’ AR15, goes on a shooting rampage. It’s totally normal.

    There is one difference, however. This time one of the victims is well positioned for doing something about it. For finally ending the USA’s plauge of mass shootings. Trump alone can do it, and he is going to do it.

    For obvious reasons known as GOP votes, he can’t be totally open about his flip on 2A providing absolute immunity to all guns and ammo and all manly man advertising, but he just flipped.

    Getting shot at a mass shooting changes people’s views on mass shootings.

    Donald J Trump will be taking over for David Hogg right about Thanskgiving this year.

    • Tom

      July 15, 2024 at 9:29 am

      It always strikes me as interesting that politicians and the supreme court are happy for everyone to have guns until those people start shooting at them. Even rhonda and his second amendment sanctuary cities wouldn’t hold a rally until everyone was marched through metal detectors but somehow when it’s schools or music festivals, churches or theaters … crickets.
      From what I’ve seen, the kid who did this was ‘not part of the clique’ and ‘relentlessly bullied’ just like ever other mentally unstable young man with easy access to high powered firearms who decides to get famous.
      It’s never going to change – just life in America these days.

    • Michael K

      July 15, 2024 at 9:47 am

      He won’t because the gun manufacturing lobby has too much money and power, and is co-owner of the GQP. Besides, he’s fully protected, and he only cares about himself.

      Just look at what he did to the Supreme Court. Nope, too little, too late. He will do nothing for sensible gun laws or anything else that benefits all Americans. He will say whatever people want to hear, but he will not deliver for the common folk. (Remember his health care and infrastructure?)

  • Not Woke

    July 15, 2024 at 9:01 am

    David Hogg and Don’t Say.. Two peas in a pod and yes it was an assassination attempt.

    • otoh

      July 15, 2024 at 1:58 pm

      The shooter was a Republican. All the beneficiaries were Republicans. So which Republican(s) do you think actually ordered it? And who were they planning to replace Trump with?

Comments are closed.


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