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I highly doubt Colin Powell would want to be anyone's VP. However, I can definitely see him endorsing Obama and accepting a possible position in his administration. That wink and nod, alone, would be very beneficial to Obama. Powell still carries powerful influence with the American people.
The one man I think Obama should very seriously consider for a running mate is Va. Senator Jim Webb. He is a highly decorated combat veteran and former Navy Secretary under Ronald Reagan. Webb's experience trumps McCain's and would completely neutralize that experience argument. What then would McCain have to talk about? Nothing!
Jim Webb? Not bad that would go a long ways towards stalemating McCain’s only real advantage. His so called expertise on matters pertaining to waging foreign wars. I'd like to see McCain pick a Lieberman, just to watch the fireworks from the right. The right wing of the GOP is never going to embrace him anyway, why bother even pretending to care, choose the guy you can work with, maybe even like, and go for it. I certainly have more respect for that sort of thing, then I do kowtowing to the wants of a group of people who despise you, no matter what you do.
I've not done as much research on the third parties out there, I've still got time to do so ... there has to be an alternative to the two big parties who so resemble each other in their lack of response to the average voter. We need that third alternative, and in order for the average workaday Joe Josephine to notice it, it has to have support, even if they lose this time around. Maybe the next time around, they don't.
I suppose when I think of a third party, I'm thinking of the Libertarians, but they aren't necessarily who I'd like to see win. At this point in the process, I'd almost support the Workers World Party, or the Greens.
It doesn't necessarily matter who, it matters that the big two parties get a wake up call, and answer to the bidding of the citizens of this country, rather than a power elite.
It really isn't too late for us, you, me and all the others to wake up and discover we are powerful, and we can make a difference. All the problems won't be solved overnight, big problems never are, don't let the size of the task keep us from attempting the task. Staying home and not voting is exactly what the power elite want us to do. Don't play into their hands.
I look for McCain to choose Romney, which will only solidify his chances. The Democratic candidate will most likely choose Edwards.
Huckabee won't go over well in the west at all. If you want to win the states of California and Washington as a GOP candidate, some one a bit more moderate is called for. Almost anyone is preferable. I like Romney quite frankly, he's a successful business man, but oooh noooo, he's a Mormon ... and that matters why?
If McCain wants to portray himself as a Maverick (Annapolis grads don't get much more Establishment), then select someone outside of the mainstream. But then his portrayal of himself as a Washington maverick is just that, a portrayal ...
McCain will choose Mike Huckabee, if he really means to win. Huckabee, a total longshot, somehow outlasted mighty Mitt Romney and blocked for McCain. McCain won't forget that.
Huckabee actually even won over a lot of young voters by participating on shows like "The Colbert Report" and "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno." I saw it all. The man's funny. Oh yah, and he plays bass. He's like Gomer Pyle done wandered up into a Grateful Dead Concert.
Also, Huckabee is young, in his early 50's. His biggest problem is his lack of foreign policy knowledge. If he studied up on it, he could make his own run for the presidency after a term of McCain's VP. McCain can't win Southern conservatives and evangelicals; but Huckabee can. The primary campaign proved that money can't buy love. Romney cannot help McCain win.