Democrat Clinton picks Kaine as running
mate, bypassing liberals
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[July 23, 2016]
By John Whitesides and Amanda Becker
WASHINGTON/TAMPA, Fla. (Reuters) - Hillary
Clinton named U.S. Senator Tim Kaine as her running mate on Friday,
opting for an experienced governing partner who will help her present
the Democratic ticket as a steady alternative to the unpredictable
campaign of Republican presidential rival Donald Trump.
The selection of Kaine, a self-described "boring" Virginian with a
reputation for low-key competence, could appeal to independents and
moderates, but it quickly angered liberal groups that object to his
advocacy for an Asian free-trade pact.
The Spanish-speaking former Virginia governor and Richmond mayor fit
Clinton's long-stated criteria that the vice presidential choice be a
capable and reliable partner who is ready to take over the presidency if
necessary.
Clinton made the announcement via Twitter and a text message to
supporters after the first day of a two-day campaign swing in Florida.
She called Kaine to tell him about 40 minutes before the announcement,
and called President Barack Obama shortly after Kaine.
"I'm thrilled to tell you this first: I've chosen Sen. Tim Kaine as my
running mate. Welcome him to my team," she said in her text message.
Kaine, 58, edged out two other finalists - Cory Booker, a U.S. senator
from New Jersey, and Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, according to a
Democratic source familiar with the discussions.
Clinton also bypassed candidates who would have generated more
excitement among liberal and Hispanic activists, including progressive
favorite U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren and two Hispanic members of
Obama's Cabinet, Julian Castro and Thomas Perez.
The former secretary of state will be formally nominated as the party's
presidential candidate for the Nov. 8 election at next week's Democratic
convention in Philadelphia. She leads Trump in many opinion polls.
Clinton's choice of a running mate could give her campaign momentum
heading into the convention, as the fight for the White House begins a
more than three-month push to the finish.
Clinton, 68, acknowledged in an interview earlier this week that even
Kaine admits he is boring, and said she did not mind.
"I love that about him," she told Charlie Rose of CBS News and PBS.
"He's never lost an election. He was a world-class mayor, governor and
senator and is one of the most highly respected senators I know."
A campaign official said Clinton was impressed with Kaine's
down-to-earth style when she campaigned with him in Virginia last week.
Afterwards, Kaine went back to her house in Washington, D.C., for a
90-minute evening meeting.
Two days later, Kaine and his wife, Anne, joined Clinton in New York for
lunch, along with Clinton's husband, former President Bill Clinton,
daughter Chelsea and Chelsea's husband. Kaine was the only vice
presidential candidate to have a private family lunch during the vetting
process, the official said.
"GLAD TO SEE THEM"
Clinton's campaign chairman, John Podesta, who led the search, offered
her advice. "It needs to be someone who whenever they walk into a room
you are glad to see them and want to have them as part of any
conversation," the campaign official quoted Podesta telling her.
Kaine's first appearance with Clinton will be on Saturday at an event in
Miami, a campaign aide said.
"Just got off the phone with Hillary. I'm honored to be her running
mate. Can't wait to hit the trail tomorrow in Miami," Kaine said on
Twitter.
Liberal groups, which had pressured Clinton not to pick Kaine because of
his support for fast-track authority for the White House to negotiate
the Trans-Pacific Partnership, were dismayed by the choice.
Critics of the Asia free-trade deal, including Trump and Clinton's
Democratic primary rival Bernie Sanders, say it would be unfair to U.S.
workers and kill jobs. Clinton praised the deal when she was secretary
of state, but has since distanced herself from it.
"Republicans will run hard against Democrats on trade this year.
Unfortunately, since Tim Kaine voted to fast-track the Trans-Pacific
Partnership, Republicans now have a new opening to attack Democrats on
this economic populist issue," said Stephanie Taylor, co-founder of the
Progressive Change Campaign Committee.
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Democratic U.S. presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and U.S.
Senator Tim Kaine (D-VA) wave to the crowd during a campaign rally
at Ernst Community Cultural Center in Annandale, Virginia, U.S.,
July 14, 2016. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
Hispanic activists also may be annoyed with the pick of Kaine given
that Latino candidates were again passed over, though some Latino
advocacy groups praised the choice.
"She has chosen a running mate that has a track record of advocating
and fighting for the issues that affect the Latino community and our
nation: immigration, healthcare, women’s rights and the
environment," said Ben Monterroso, executive director of Mi Familia
Vota.
Top Republicans were quick to criticize Clinton's choice.
The Trump campaign called Kaine "an ethically challenged insider"
and called Clinton and Kaine a "Status Quo" ticket. "If you think
Crooked Hillary and Corrupt Kaine are going to change anything in
Washington, it's just the opposite," campaign aide Jason Miller said
in a statement.
Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus condemned the
pick, saying Clinton spent the past week pandering to Sanders and
grassroots Democrats, and now "has chosen someone who holds
positions that she’s spent the entire primary trying to get to the
left of."
But Republican Senator Jeff Flake of Arizona, who has been critical
of Trump, said on Twitter that he was trying to count the ways he
hated Tim Kaine. "Drawing a blank. Congrats to a good man and a good
friend," Flake said.
Kaine could help Clinton in Virginia, a heavily contested swing
state, and choosing Kaine will not cost Democrats a seat in the
Senate, where Republicans now hold a majority. Virginia's Democratic
governor, Terry McAuliffe, a close Clinton friend and ally, will
name a replacement for Kaine if he and Clinton win the White House.
Some Democrats who know Kaine well dismissed fears that he lacks the
toughness to stand up to Republican attacks, given how deftly Trump
chewed up "low-energy" Jeb Bush and "little Marco" Rubio in the
Republican primaries.
"It's not the Donald Trump sledgehammer. But he's not a shrinking
violet," said Luke Albee, a former chief of staff to Democrat Mark
Warner, the senior U.S. senator from Virginia.
Albee, who has watched Kaine up close over the years, added, "I
wouldn't mistake a thoughtful and genial disposition for an
inability to really forcefully articulate differences."
Kaine has good relations with senators from the opposing party,
according to senior Senate Republican congressional aides. One aide
speculated Kaine would be effective in reaching out to congressional
Republicans if he becomes vice president, a role that Vice President
Joe Biden has played for Obama.
Kaine, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations and Armed Services
committees, has been a leading voice calling for a formal
authorization of war against the Islamic State militant group. He
played an important role in securing congressional review of the
2015 international deal on Iran's nuclear program, although he
eventually backed it.
He has a track-record of backing liberal causes such as ending
across-the-board automatic budget cuts and providing a pathway to
citizenship to millions of undocumented immigrants.
Kaine, a Catholic who became fluent in Spanish speaker while serving
as a missionary in Honduras, has expressed personal opposition to
abortion, but has a public record in support of abortion rights.
(Additional reporting by Richard Cowan in Washington and Luciana
Lopez in New York; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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