Who will be Donald Trump’s running mate in November’s election? And when will the announcement be made?
The questions are growing louder as the Republican National Convention approaches, which opens July 15 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and where the former president plans to announce his choice. But he could also very well surprise and announce it earlier.
For weeks, rumors and negotiations have been multiplying behind the scenes in the Republican camp around potential candidates. There are now seven left, placed on the stage before the curtain rises. Seven aspiring vice-presidents placed at the heart of a decisive, delicate and complex choice because of their contributions as varied as they are fundamental to the populist’s electoral campaign. Autopsy of the forces present.
Those who bring in money
This is the crux of the matter. Money is certainly what Doug Burgumthe North Dakota governor who is said to be at the top of Donald Trump’s list of favorites, is preparing to enter the former president’s new race for the White House.
Before taking over the small state, the man became a billionaire by selling his software company to Microsoft, then worked in real estate development and venture capital.
At the start of last year’s Republican primaries, he financed his candidacy against Donald Trump out of his own pocket, before quickly withdrawing from the race and becoming a visible and audible defender of the real estate mogul, on television, during political rallies and fundraising campaigns.
A rich man surrounded by rich people, Doug Burgum also has everything to become the new Mike Pence, with the unconditional loyalty sought by Donald Trump in addition. We will remember that the former vice-president was rejected by Donald Trump after he refused to embark on the undemocratic project of overturning the result of the 2020 presidential election.
The governor of North Dakota is, like Pence, calm, collected, a little dull, from a very insignificant state. He should therefore not seek the spotlight too much to overshadow the ex-president.
The arrival of the senator from Florida, Marco Rubio, in the Republican ticket would also stimulate the contributions of very generous donors who for the moment are turning away from Donald Trump, put off by his extremism and his violent rhetoric. A rising figure within the party before the birth of Trumpism, Rubio remains a respected politician among conservative and moderate fringes within the political party, particularly on questions of foreign policy — territory that Trump has undermined by getting a little too close to the dictators — and national security.
His candidacy, while appealing to a less white and more diverse electorate, could nonetheless bring to the forefront the senator’s many criticisms of Donald Trump when the two men faced off in the 2016 primaries. He called the former reality TV star a “con man” seeking to “defraud” the Republican Party.
Marco Rubio is also expected to move from Florida, if he is chosen. The 12e The amendment to the U.S. Constitution does not allow presidential and vice presidential candidates from the same party to live in the same state.
Those who bring new blood
At 78, Donald Trump could be tempted to rejuvenate the Republican ticket a little by choosing J.D. Vance as his running mate. At 39, the young senator from Ohio and former venture capitalist quickly found his place in Washington by positioning himself as a defender of the ” Make America Great Again (MAGA)” by Donald Trump, particularly on questions of immigration, trade and foreign policy, and this, with the energy of the “millennial” generation to which he belongs and of which the ex-president will also need to find his seat in the Oval Office.
Brought to the national stage by the publication in 2016 of the family story, Hillbilly Elegyindirectly chronicling the emergence of Trumpism in the country’s rural counties, J.-D. Vance has become close to the son of former President Donald Trump Jr. and a key figure in political events on the American radical right. An unlikely fate for someone who, in 2016, called Trump a “total fraud,” a “moral disaster,” and “America’s Hitler.”
At 45 years old, Byron Donaldsrepresenting Florida in Washington, also has all the potential to bring a younger clientele closer to the Republican presidential project, particularly targeted in his case: the young African-American man that Donald Trump is seeking to court in order to reduce the support of Joe Biden and the Democrats on this side.
Byron Donalds, who entered politics to accompany the emergence of the Tea Party, a conservative political movement that paved the way for Trumpism, has for years promoted conservatism which also exists within the African-American community. Just like Marco Rubio, however, he will have to leave Florida and take up residence elsewhere for his candidacy to be valid.
Those who attract lost voters
Another asset of Donald Trump, Tim Scottthe only African-American Republican in the Senate, where he represents South Carolina. The latter has largely expressed his loyalty to the former president by supporting the populist’s candidacy in the primaries in his state, and this, against that of Nikki Haley, his compatriot, former governor of the place and former ambassador of the United States to the United Nations.
A faithful among the faithful, Tim Scott launched a vast campaign in early June, with a budget of 14 million, aimed at convincing voters from minority groups to vote for Donald Trump in seven of the key states where the next presidency will be decided. He is also strengthening the religious conservative vote by presenting himself for years first as a “biblical leader” and not as a “Republican and conservative leader”. “I am first and foremost a Christian,” he said in 2020. “And that is the thing that I have chosen to be above all else.”
The application ofElise Stefanikthe only woman on the list of vice-presidential contenders, has no shortage of appeal for Donald Trump. The 39-year-old New York representative in Washington has the energy of her youth. She also comes from the moderate Republican establishment, having been an assistant to former Speaker of the House Paul Ryan and having worked on the Domestic Policy Council under George W. Bush. She has since embraced the radicalism and conspiracies fueled by Trump’s MAGA movement, but could still offer Donald Trump the opportunity to reconnect with an electorate that the populist has partly lost: educated, moderate, conservative women from the suburbs who, in 2020, chose “the lesser of two evils” by getting closer to Joe Biden.
Other option: Ben Carson. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development in Donald Trump’s government, he managed to develop a very strong bond with the former president, which could open the door to the Republican ticket for next November’s election. In exchange, the former neurosurgeon, who speaks without ever taking up too much space, could capture the attention of the African-American electorate and other minorities in the country who usually stay far from the polls or far from the Republican camp. , particularly when this camp descends into racist rhetoric or approaches white supremacist groups.
At 72, Ben Carson has the disadvantage of his age in a race marked by the advanced age of the two presidential candidates, but the advantage of a relative discretion which would thus leave all the space to the former reality TV star, during the campaign and, in the event of victory, afterwards.