I've been blown away by Nina Turner, Sanders' national co-chair, throughout the primary. Her speech in New York really called out Elizabeth Warren strongly without even saying her name. I've been hearing that she's his most likely VP pick. Bernie mentioned in a recent interview that he would want a VP who represented a different perspective, maybe a woman of colour, probably someone younger. So that felt like a strong hint. Some folks think that means Tulsi Gabbard, but Tulsi is eyeing Secretary of State more than VP. If Tulsi can damage Warren on her military record like she intended to do in the last debate, but the attack wasn't quick enough and they cut to commercial... if she connects in hitting Warren like she did Kamala and Tim Ryan, she could earn something for it. She's more well liked by Republicans than Democrats, and she constantly embraces the talking points about finding common ground with the opposition, I think she's running to join Sanders and banking on him winning, so she should be fun to watch going forward. She's 1 poll away from qualifying for Nov. debate. Castro is further away, more likely to drop out.
Anyway, the last clue I needed was in the recent Nina Turner interview on The Breakfast Club. Great interview. But there's a point where she frames something as "we have the policies that address these issues." The way she stated it really sounded like she was taking some personal ownership. I'm 90% sure that if he wins, she's his VP pick, and if he names her before South Carolina, she will give a boost as soon as he names her. She's been awesome.
Can someone give me some background as to when candidates start naming their VP picks? I'm not too familiar with the history of that. Thanks!
Anyway, the last clue I needed was in the recent Nina Turner interview on The Breakfast Club. Great interview. But there's a point where she frames something as "we have the policies that address these issues." The way she stated it really sounded like she was taking some personal ownership. I'm 90% sure that if he wins, she's his VP pick, and if he names her before South Carolina, she will give a boost as soon as he names her. She's been awesome.
Can someone give me some background as to when candidates start naming their VP picks? I'm not too familiar with the history of that. Thanks!
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