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--1996: Bob Dole-Jack Kemp There may be a lot to be gleaned about Romney's VP pick from Kemp, a tax-cutting aficionado who counted Paul Ryan among his disciples and employed Ryan as an aide in his congressional office. President Bill Clinton had a hefty lead over Dole in the polls before the senator added Kemp to the ticket. That went a long way toward narrowing that lead. But the economy was still thriving in the mid-1990s, and Clinton's personal life had yet to implode. Voters may have liked Kemp, but they were content to give Clinton another four years at the helm. --1992: Bill Clinton-Al Gore It's hard to dismiss the boost that Clinton got from picking Gore as his running mate. Both were younger than 50, giving the campaign a sense of vivacity and fresh ideas. Clinton's charisma and empathy were complemented by Gore's temperate disposition and attention to policy detail. Both Democrats called the South home
-- a factor that helped them defeat President George H.W. Bush and Vice President Dan Quayle in typically Republican states such as Georgia, Kentucky and West Virginia. Yet their victory in the election may have had less to do with Gore and more to do with Ross Perot, a third-party candidate who split off 19 percent of the vote
-- much of it from the Republicans.
--1984: Walter Mondale-Geraldine Ferraro Case in point for why modern presidential campaigns typically vet their vice presidential prospects to the high heavens: Ferraro, who was a huge boon to Mondale's candidacy in the first days after he announced his pick. The first woman to appear on a major party's presidential ticket, Ferraro came with a compelling narrative about her humble beginnings. But soon came the relentless questions about her husband's finances, which turned Ferraro into a major liability for the campaign. At the same time, President Ronald Reagan was a popular incumbent, and the economy was recovering. Mondale and Ferraro lost the race by almost 17 million votes
-- that's 18 percentage points -- and by a 525-13 margin in the Electoral College.
[Associated
Press;
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