Drum roll. Suspense. Who will it be?
In this corner, we have Stormin' Mormon Mitt Romney. In the other, we
have Brain-Buster Bobby Jindal.
Amid speculation that John McCain will announce his vice presidential
pick soon, political nail-biters have begun placing bets. Favorites include
Louisiana Gov. Jindal, with whom McCain is meeting Wednesday, and former
Massachusetts Gov. Romney, whose resume is familiar.
Can McCain's former foe become his new best friend?
Romney would bring more than squeaky clean qualifications and youthful
good looks to the ticket. New polling in Michigan by Ayres, McHenry &
Associates shows that Romney gives McCain a significant jump -- "off the
charts," as someone familiar with the still-unreleased poll described it --
and makes him competitive in a state that hasn't voted Republican since
1988. Mike Huckabee had little effect on the survey results and Minnesota
Gov. Tim Pawlenty's name was of negligible value.
Given the importance of even that single state, where 17 electoral
votes are at stake, Romney would seem a logical choice. Then again, as
conservatives frequently note, logic doesn't always work with McCain, who
seems to enjoy doing the opposite of what he senses people want him to do.
Although Jindal is less well-known, and though he insists he's not
interested in the VP slot, he's got rising star power. Importantly, he's
young -- and looks even younger. If he had cheeks, you'd want to pinch
them.
Reed-thin, Jindal has the metabolism of a hummingbird and the kind of
intellect that makes Vulcans uneasy. Often referred to as the smartest man
in the room, Jindal's mind can wrap around anything but the idea of repose.
More to an important point, he's not another white guy. The son of
Indian immigrants, Jindal is both the Republican Barack Obama and the
anti-Obama. To a vote, he's a fiscal and social, pro-life conservative who
came to the governorship on a promise of reform in the wake of Katrina.
While then-Gov. Kathleen Blanco told President Bush she'd get back to
him about what she needed after the hurricane, Jindal orchestrated a
national emergency system of volunteers, faith-based agencies, retail
providers and truckers to donate and deliver supplies to the drenched and
homeless. Affectionately told stories of his gritty performance are the
stuff of future legend.
That can-do spirit is a thread that runs through Jindal's life. Before
becoming governor, he served in the U.S. House of Representatives. Before
that, he was appointed secretary of the Louisiana Department of Health and
Hospitals, taking the state's bankrupt Medicaid program from a $400 million
deficit to a $220 million surplus. He also served as president of the
University of Louisiana System.
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