Rice likely to return politics as Romney VP, says report

Rice likely to return politics as Romney VP, says report

WASHINGTON - Agence France-Presse
Rice likely to return politics as Romney VP, says report

Condoleezza Rice, former secretary of state, may be named as Romney’s VP. AFP photo

Mitt Romney’s campaign team stoked speculation on July 12 about who his vice presidential candidate will be as one report said Condoleezza Rice was a surprise name near the top of his list.

“Sometime soon, Mitt will be announcing his choice for VP,” said a statement from the Republican presidential hopeful’s camp, asking for $3 donations “for the chance to meet Mitt and his choice for VP in person.” A long list of possibles includes leading names like Rob Portman and
Paul Ryan, but The Drudge Report said it had been told that Rice was now a top contender.

“Late Thursday evening, Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign launched a new fundraising drive, ‘Meet The VP’ - just as Romney himself has narrowed the field of candidates to a handful, sources reveal,” the report said.
 
Bush’s secretary of state

“And a surprise name is now near the top of the list: Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice!” Rice, who was former president George W. Bush’s secretary of state, has been frequently mentioned as a potential vice presidential pick for Romney, and is someone who could lend foreign policy heft to the ticket.

As an African-American woman, she is seen as having the potential to blunt the advantages which President Barack Obama has in two important demographics.

Rice would still be considered a surprise choice as she carries a lot of baggage from the still unpopular Bush era, not least her leading role as an architect of the Iraq war.

She has also repeatedly said that she is not interested in being Romney’s running mate and is enjoying being on the faculty as a professor at Stanford University in California.

Portman, a senator from the battleground state of Ohio, and Ryan, a rising star in the Republican party who chairs the House budget committee, have up until now been considered two of the frontrunners.

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