The Daily - Inside Trump’s Search for a Vice President
Episode Date: June 13, 2024The makeup of the 2024 presidential race has felt inevitable from the start — with one notable exception: Donald J. Trump’s choice of a running mate.Michael Bender, a political correspondent for T...he Times, explains why Mr. Trump’s requirements in a No. 2 are very different this time round than they were eight years ago.Guest: Michael Bender, a political correspondent for The New York Times. Background reading: Here is a comprehensive look at who is in the mix to be Mr. Trump’s running mate.Ben Carson is a wild card in the vice-presidential sweepstakes, but don’t count him out just yet.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
The makeup of the 2024 presidential race has felt inevitable from the start, with one notable
exception, Donald Trump's choice of a running mate.
Today, my colleague, Mike Bender,
examines the top contenders for the job
and what choosing them would tell us
about Trump himself in this campaign.
It's Thursday, June 13th.
Mike, somehow this is your first appearance on the show, so welcome at long last to The Daily.
Thank you for having me.
It's my pleasure.
You have spent the past few weeks trying to get inside Donald Trump's search for a vice president.
And what is so unusual about this search is that we already know what Trump wanted in a vice president from his 2016 campaign when he picked Mike Pence.
And we know how badly that all ended with Trump openly denouncing Pence for not helping him
overturn his 2020 election loss and reportedly endorsing calls for Pence's death, his hanging
at the Capitol on January 6th. So with all of that behind us, what is Trump looking for this time around?
Yeah, I mean, the search is very different from where he was at this time eight years ago. Eight
years ago, he was a first-time candidate, and he needed credibility with the evangelical community.
I mean, remember, Donald Trump is a thrice-married playboy from New York
whose sex life was splashed across the New York tabloids.
Adding Mike Pence to the ticket gave him a lot of credibility with evangelicals
and with establishment Republicans.
Pence was a governor of Indiana and had been a former congressman.
He provided a sort of port of entry for these folks into Trump world
and settled a lot
of them down. It's a very different calculus this time around. Trump believes voters are going to
make their decision based on the top of the ticket, not the running mate.
Based on Trump himself.
Based on Trump himself and the fact that we have two incumbents effectively running.
Everyone who's going to vote in this election has opinions formed about Biden and Trump. There's really no one that he can add to the ticket that is going to make a giant difference
or going to persuade people in a major way to come on board. And he's probably right about that.
So in a way, you're saying Trump's search for number two is defined by what it's
not focused on, which is he's not trying to solve a political problem through his vice
presidential pick. Yeah, that's right. He's not giving a lot of value to a political problem through his vice presidential pick.
Yeah, that's right.
He's not giving a lot of value to a political upside of a candidate.
There was a lot of chatter early on, you remember, about maybe adding a woman to the ticket.
Trump has hemorrhaged support from suburban women for eight years.
Right. And there was a thought that if he could find a strong woman in a governor's office or in
Congress to add to the ticket that she could
help persuade some of these folks back to Trump's side. But my reporting here is that there were
some women in consideration at the very beginning stages of this process,
but he hasn't seriously considered a woman for this job in quite a while now.
Fascinating. Okay, so we've been focused a lot, Mike, on what Trump is not focused
on in his VP search. Let's turn to what he is putting a lot of weight on as he searches for
a number two. Well, right now, my reporting is that the biggest factor, the biggest through line
through some of his top tier candidates are folks I'm calling do no harm candidates. What do you
mean by that? The best
example of this is Kristi Noem and what not to do. Kristi Noem is the governor of South Dakota.
She has long been a rising star in the party. She's joined Trump on the campaign trail several
times, very much wanted this job. But Governor Kristi Noem has had, let's call it a tough time
lately with that story that just won't go away.
It all came crashing down a couple of months ago when she put a book out.
It includes a bizarre story about her shooting and killing her dog.
Detailing how she dragged her 14-month-old dog, Cricket, out to her gravel pit and shot it dead.
After killing her dog, she says she also killed their goat.
What the hell was South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem thinking? This set off a firestorm in the
media. What a charming anecdote to include in a book. Who was her editor? Where even Fox News
hosts couldn't get enough of this. In your new book, it's called No Going Back,
you include a story about shooting your dog.
And kept asking her.
Did the dog story come up in your conversation with Trump? I talk to President Trump all the time.
About the dog?
About a lot of things.
To explain Cricket, to explain the dog.
Did you bring up the dog with Trump?
Yes, enough, Stuart.
This interview is ridiculous, what you are doing right now.
So you need to stop. It is.
Okay. It is. Okay.
It is.
Right, to her great frustration.
And to the great frustration of Trump.
He was telling people that he did not want to be out answering questions
about a vice presidential candidate who shot their dog.
It even became kind of Gallo's humor for him at some point.
Randomly in conversations,
he would ask people, well, have you shot your dog? He would end conversations telling people,
make sure you don't shoot your dog. So this is an example of something Trump does not want to
deal with on the campaign trail. That probably goes for just about any presidential candidate.
But what is particularly important for Trump right now is that his plate is full of distractions. He was just convicted of 34 felonies in New York
and has a litany of other legal problems he's facing. So the most important thing for him
right now is a vice presidential candidate who is a disciplined campaigner and can go out there and not cause any
more unwanted distractions for his campaign. All right. So besides do me no harm, where else is
Trump putting his focus in a VP search? Yeah, the eventual VP is going to have to meet Trump's
primetime reality TV show version of being out of central casting.
And what I mean by that in this context is he wants someone who can go on television and defend him ably and effectively.
The other thing that's very interesting to me is that the former president gives outsized importance to debate performance.
importance to debate performance. He believes that he won the election in 2016 in large part because of his own performance in the debates against Hillary Clinton. And for that reason,
since then, really, he's felt like debates can be determinative and want someone who he feels
comfortable can go on television and hold his own against Kamala Harris, a seasoned politician,
television and hold his own against Kamala Harris, a seasoned politician, a former prosecutor.
So whoever Trump picks is going to have to be able to hold his own in this sort of arena.
But it's always a fine line with Trump.
They're going to have to perform well, be effective, but not effective enough where they start to approach Trump's spotlight.
Hmm.
Say more about that.
Yeah.
I mean, this is a president who puts a very
high value on loyalty, but it's a very unique twist on loyalty. He has a very specific definition.
The sort of first rule of proving loyalty to Trump is not to overshadow him. He doesn't want
someone out there who he feels like is trying to leverage his political brand. Trump does not really want
a successor here. A lot of presidential nominees will pick someone who can help build the party,
particularly in a second term. The attention naturally turns to the vice president and who's
coming next. Trump has shown little interest in that. So while he wants someone who will be a great
presence on TV and on the campaign trail, that running mate better be good, but not too good.
So in summary, Trump's VP search goes something like this. I don't really care if you win me a
key voting block. Don't cause me problems. And while I want you to be able to wow an audience,
you can't wow them more than me. That's absolutely right. And based on those principles,
his team has actually put out a pretty extensive list of Republicans who they are vetting for the
job right now. But my reporting is that this list is a little wider
than the folks who Trump is really considering.
His team is trying to build drama and suspense
and also give him some room to change his mind
before he officially makes his pick
at the Republican National Convention in July.
But at this moment, based on my reporting,
there are three people who Trump is seriously considering
for his next vice president.
We'll be right back.
So, Mike, tell us about these top three contenders at this moment for Trump's vice presidential slot and how Trump is thinking about each of them.
Yeah, one we can start with is the senator from Ohio, J.D. Vance.
Despite all outward appearances, I'm a cultural outsider. I didn't come from the elites.
Most listeners will probably remember J.D. Vance as the guy who burst onto the national scene with a book about his time growing up in Ohio. I came from a southern Ohio steel town,
and it's a town that's really struggling in a lot
of ways, in ways that are indicative of the broader struggles of America's working class.
That sort of explained the forgotten man and woman in America right at the time that Trump
was leveraging that idea to become president of the United States. Right.
leveraging that idea to become president of the United States. Right. Here with me is J.D. Vance,
author of Hillbilly Elegy. J.D. has been unlocking the mysteries to Donald Trump's appeal.
J.D. Vance went on a national book tour. He was on television, on podcasts, talking about his book.
Donald Trump, if nothing else, is relatable to the average working class American because he speaks off the cuff, even if,
you know, half of the things that he says don't make any sense or a quarter of the things that he says are offensive. But also talking pretty negatively about Donald Trump. Right. I can't
stomach Trump. I think that he's noxious and is leading the white working class to a very dark
place. I mean, he was really scathing in how he depicted Donald Trump
as effectively a con artist who was taking advantage
of the people that he was writing about to sort of fuel his political rise.
Look, I wasn't a big Trump guy in 2016, but I think he did a good job.
Until he changed his mind on Trump.
That's why I supported him in 2020.
And I think the recognition that I changed my mind is one of the reasons why the president came and endorsed me.
And that comes a few years later when Vance decides to run for Senate in 2022.
I actually aligned with the America First movement on the core issues.
By then, he had come, you know, 180 degrees on Trump.
Trump was right that we need to make things
in this country again so that we're self-sufficient.
And this works for Vance.
He wins Trump's endorsement,
beats a pretty crowded field
for the Republican nomination in Ohio,
and wins election in 2022,
which, if you remember,
it was a pretty tough year for Trump endorsements.
A lot of Trump picks in big states lost,
and J.D. Vance was sort of the crown jewel of that election for the former president.
So a rather convenient transformation from Trump critic to Trump fan results in J.D. Vance
winning a seat in the U.S. Senate. That's absolutely right. And
he has become one of Trump's fiercest defenders in the Senate. Support the president, volunteer
for him, donate for him, and please, for the love of God, vote for him in November because Jesse...
And he's a constant presence on the media circuit. Number one, I'm here for the simple reason to show
support for a friend. I think this trial is absolutely ridiculous. I think it's a sham
prosecution. Most recently, he was in Manhattan sitting with Trump in the courtroom. I think this
is disgraceful. I don't care what you call it. I think this proceeding, this legal proceeding
is disgraceful. And then fighting for Trump, defending him,
and criticizing the prosecution in front of the TV cameras afterward.
I don't care what you call this, but this is not the America that I know and love.
Why aren't we talking about inflation, Wolf?
Why aren't we talking about Biden's wide-open southern border?
This entire trial was cooked up to distract from Joe Biden's failures.
This is exactly what Trump wants in a vice president. Vance is maybe the best in this top tier at defending Trump publicly. He knows when to become a fire-breathing ideologue.
He knows when to turn the temperature down and become self-effacing and sort of brush
off tough questions.
Got it. So he's definitely got the very good on TV box checked.
And as you said earlier in our conversation, that's just essential.
Yeah, absolutely.
But I do think when it comes to Senator Vance, some of these strengths could be risks for him when it comes to making Trump's ticket.
He is very ambitious and he is very young. If Vice President Vance is sworn in next year,
there will be immediate speculation about his potential running in 2028 as a president.
Ah, so you're saying he runs the risk
of overshadowing Trump,
which is a cardinal sin in Trump's book.
Yeah, that's right.
And right now, in my reporting,
that's a strike against Vance when it comes to VP contention.
Okay, so Mike, who's next on the list of Trump's top three contenders at the moment?
Next on the list is someone you remember well, Michael, Senator Marco Rubio from Florida.
Right.
Yeah, you were pretty key in covering his 2016 campaign. Right. And like Vance, Mike, he has been on a very long journey of mocking
and then trying to reconcile with Trump.
That's exactly right.
I mean, Rubio was the rising star of the Republican Party
pre-Trump, the son of Cuban immigrants
with a very powerful story of his own bootstraps rise
and was seen as a potential frontrunner for the
Republican nomination until Trump showed up on the scene. He doesn't sweat because his pores are
clogged from the spray tan that he uses. And Rubio's response to Trump was pretty wild.
Donald is not going to make America great. He's going to make America orange.
What Rubio did was basically try to match Trump with
schoolyard taunts. Then he asked for a full-length mirror. I don't know why, because the podium goes
up to here, but he wanted a full-length mirror. Maybe to make sure his pants weren't wet. I don't
know. He went after Trump on the debate stage. If he builds the wall the way he built Trump
towers, he'll be using illegal immigrant labor to do it.
The second.
You know, when after his personal life,
as you know, the three divorces.
Well, I don't know anything about bankrupting four companies.
You bankrupted four.
His multiple bankruptcies,
and in pretty colorful language.
So I'm looking at little Marco and I say,
man, there's something happening with him. Trump returned fire even more so and really just demolished Rubio in
aggressively personal terms. And I see him starting to sweat like I have never seen anything like it.
Said how much he was sweating on the stage. Thank God he has really large ears,
the biggest ears I've ever seen. Made fun of his ears, portrayed him as a lightweight who
shouldn't be president, couldn't go toe to toe with any other foreign leaders,
and really set him back politically. You know, I called him a lightweight. I said at one point
he was a lightweight. And I don't mean to be insulting, but I do describe people somehow well.
I mean, suffice it to say, by the end of the 2016 race, the concept that there could ever
be a Trump-Rubio ticket was completely unfathomable.
Yeah, exactly. But what a lot of people don't realize is that Rubio really repaired
that relationship with Trump. Rubio won more votes in his Senate race in Florida than Trump did for
president in Florida. And that was oddly important to Trump. He brought that up repeatedly. Trump
likes winners, right? And Rubio had won more votes than him. So there must be, he must have missed
something. He invited Rubio over to the White House early on as sort of a
charm offensive with Rubio. And in the next few years, Rubio really did become a behind-the-scenes
close advisor for Trump on foreign policy and some other areas. And now, heading into 2024,
Trump trusts him, views him as a valuable ally, and maybe even more than that, as a pretty effective attack dog.
Right now, with Joe Biden in the White House, our adversaries are going to conclude that there
are things they can get away with and they can do because this White House is not strong. They're
not prepared. They're not even competent. And I fear what that means. This is a big, big problem.
Rubio has gotten very aggressive on television going after the Biden administration and really the president himself.
If we have another four years of Joe Biden, I don't know what this country is going to look like, but none of us are going to be happy about it.
Right. Clearly no accident because he knows he's in contention for the VP spot.
Absolutely.
Just to put a fine point on it, you would say yes if you were asked to serve as his vice presidential nominee?
point on it, you would say yes if you were asked to serve as his vice presidential nominee?
That would be presumptuous for me. I think anyone who's offered that job, to serve this country in the second highest office, assuming everything else in your life makes sense at that moment,
if you're interested in serving the country, it's an incredible place to serve.
But we're getting way ahead of our time.
So Rubio clearly checks off a ton of boxes, TV ready, loyal, attack dog, doesn't seem to do any harm to the ticket,
I'm guessing here. He's meaningfully older than Vance. Any weaknesses we should make sure to
touch on when it comes to Rubio? Yeah, the risks for Rubio are kind of counterintuitive here.
The big thing is that Trump isn't sure he really wants the job. He has not sat with
Trump in the courtroom as others have. He hasn't become a fixture at the former president's rallies.
He's not turned himself into furniture at Mar-a-Lago like other Republicans. This sort of
idea that he wants to show Trump he wants the job, but not too badly. It's a strategy with a clear logic here. I mean, again, we talked about protection of Trump's spotlight, but I'm told my reporting is that
the strategy has kind of confused Trump. I talked to someone who sat with Trump the other day,
and Trump asked him point blank, does Rubio even want the job? That's not a good look for the
Florida senator. Fascinating. So the flip side of don't overshadow me is make sure that I feel a sufficient amount of your love. And Rubio so far
hasn't shown Trump enough love. That's exactly right. Okay, I think that brings us now to the
third of these contenders. And probably the least known. This is Doug Burgum, the governor of North Dakota,
who would be, if he joins a ticket and wins election,
the first vice president from the great state of North Dakota.
So who's Doug Burgum?
Who is Doug Burgum?
Doug Burgum is a kid that grew up in a small town
north of North Dakota, 300 people.
The streets weren't even paved.
Burgum has amassed his own fortune.
Saw my first computer and I said, wow, that's going to change the world.
By repeatedly building billion-dollar companies, including one he sold to Microsoft.
Had this fantastic run as a public company, got acquired by Microsoft, and then I joined that team and helped build Microsoft.
help build Microsoft. He's close friends with the billionaire, former executive of Microsoft,
and has a number of other wealthy, rich tech investors on speed dial. This is important for Trump because he likes having connections to rich people who serve as sort of a validation for Trump.
If you're serving for me, that enhances Trump's brand and Trump's self-worth. Working with President Trump as a governor was like having a beautiful breeze at your back.
I guess I can explain it this way.
Trump likes to collect wealthy white men, wealthy white businessmen like they were porcelain dolls.
Who are we going to send back to the White House?
Trump!
That's fantastic.
Okay, well, besides this rich white porcelain dollage that Trump likes, what is it about
Burgum that has drawn Trump's interest in him as a potential VP?
Yeah, Burgum is in his mid-60s, which makes him closer to being a generational peer to Trump, who's in his late
70s. And Trump likes generational peers. Remember in 2017, the average age of his cabinet was 62
years old, which was one of the oldest of any recent president. And Trump also likes Burgum's
independence, not just financially, but politically. He self-funded his own campaign for governor in 2016.
He was a outsider candidate and won that race and his reelection without really any help
from Trump or Trump's political machine.
And that's important to Trump
when it comes to who he can trust behind the scenes
to tell him what he needs to know.
He doesn't want someone to do that publicly.
He doesn't want to be embarrassed.
He doesn't want to be overshadowed.
But behind the scenes, he does want some back and forth.
He does want to hear different points of view.
And when you agree with Trump behind the scenes,
he wants to know that it's not because you're afraid
that he might turn against you.
Other folks who owe their entire political rise to Trump
might have trouble connecting
with the former president on that level.
The folks I've talked to who have been in the room with Burgum and Trump have told me they have a very easy dynamic.
There's a very clear respect on both sides.
And these guys seem to like each other.
Hmm.
So this is kind of fascinating, Mike.
It sounds like one of Burgum's biggest advantages is that his political career has been pretty independent of Trump.
He didn't start out as a Trump critic who then needed to bend the knee for his own political survival in the same way that both Vance and Rubio did.
Instead, Burgum made his way in politics by his own accord.
He doesn't really owe Trump much of anything.
And to Trump, that might mean Burgum's more willing to be candid with him, albeit behind the scenes, not publicly.
And on top of all that, he's older and therefore less of a threat to Trump's spotlight, less at risk of overshadowing him.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
I would sum up Burgum's advantages as saying he's probably, in this group, the safest pick
for Trump.
But in a weird way, he's also the biggest wild card.
And what I mean by that is he is relatively untested on the national stage, even though
he did run for president last year.
But that was really a short-lived campaign.
If you blink, you missed it.
And he's not really been on television
as much as Rubio and Vance in recent years.
And he is, you know, to put it generously,
not known for thrilling applause lines
on the campaign trail.
And he has almost eight years in the
governor's office in a very, very Republican state with some very conservative policies that will get
dug into by the national media. The big one, I think, is a hugely restrictive abortion law he
signed last year as governor. Trump is responsible for overturning Roe versus Wade. Right. But he
sees abortion as a real tough issue for
Republicans. And having a running mate who signed a law that bans abortions after six weeks,
including no exceptions for rape or incest after six weeks, is going to be a tough one for the
ticket in the general election. So Burgum does a lot of the things that Trump wants in a VP,
but the problem would seem to be that he might do some harm to the ticket, and Trump has that do no harm rule.
That's absolutely right. When it comes to Trump's decision, the former president has a lot of things to think about.
Mike, we've been spending all this time talking about what Trump wants in his VP in 2024 and how these three potential
contenders fit into that. But what we haven't talked about, to circle back to the beginning
and what Trump did to Mike Pence, is what Trump may ask of these three guys if they were to become
his VP and how comfortable these three contenders might be in doing those things.
I mean, everything our colleagues have been reporting so far shows that a second Trump
term would involve him testing the bounds of the Constitution.
He's going to seek more power than any president has in modern times.
He's talked about firing anyone in the government bureaucracy who challenges him.
He's talked about turning the Department of Justice into a tool for revenge against his political foes.
What does it say about these VP contenders that they want to be the number two in that kind of an administration?
To orbit Trump is to put at risk your own personal dignity.
And all of these folks are very smart people who understand that. They know that they're going to
be put in some very precarious positions, and they're going to have to shift their own thinking
when it comes to politics, personal pride, and maybe even their
legal interpretations of the Constitution. Right. I think about how many people, Mike,
in Trump's orbit have been charged with a crime for what they did, for example, around January 6th.
Exactly. I mean, there are very few people who have put themselves in service of Trump and have emerged for the better.
All of these top three contenders have been on their own long journey inside the Republican
Party to get to where they are now. And to join Trump's ticket is really an acknowledgement that the old ways of thinking about the Republican Party and republicanism and conservatism are over and that Trump has won.
And the reward for that acquiescence is potentially a spot as the number two Republican in the country and possibly next year, the number two position in the most powerful government in the world.
Well, Mike, thank you very much. We appreciate it.
Thank you so much.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
On Wednesday, Southern Baptists voted to oppose the use of in vitro fertilization. It was an indication that ordinary evangelicals are increasingly open to arguments that equate embryos with human life,
and that fetal personhood may be the next front for the anti-abortion movement.
The resolution against IVF, adopted at the Southern Baptist annual meeting,
is notable because fertility treatments are widely used by evangelicals.
And officials at the Federal Reserve said they would make a single cut to interest
rates this year, suggesting that they are in no hurry to lower historically high borrowing costs.
The Fed continues to believe that high interest rates, which remain above 5%, are the best weapon against inflation
because they slow spending by both consumers and businesses.
Today's episode was produced by Rob Zipko, Stella Tan, and Carlos Prieto,
with help from Jessica Chung and Nina Feldman.
It was edited by Rachel Quester, contains original music by Mary Lozano,
Rowan Nemezdo, and Diane Wong, and was engineered by Alyssa Moxley.
Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Lansford of Wonderly. That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Mbaro.
See you tomorrow.