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US hopefuls weigh running mates | US hopefuls weigh running mates |
(about 2 hours later) | |
US presidential candidate John McCain is to meet three Republicans who observers say are among those he is considering as possible running mates. | US presidential candidate John McCain is to meet three Republicans who observers say are among those he is considering as possible running mates. |
The person chosen would become vice-president should Mr McCain win the presidential election in November. | The person chosen would become vice-president should Mr McCain win the presidential election in November. |
The move comes as the Associated Press news agency said Democratic frontrunner Barack Obama was making his own preparations to select a running mate. | The move comes as the Associated Press news agency said Democratic frontrunner Barack Obama was making his own preparations to select a running mate. |
He is still battling Hillary Clinton for the party's nomination. | He is still battling Hillary Clinton for the party's nomination. |
Both Democratic hopefuls have been campaigning in Florida. | |
Mrs Clinton won the state's primary - held in January against party rules - and wants its delegates, who have been barred from the national convention in August, to be given seats. | |
At a town hall meeting at a synagogue in Florida, Mr Obama said, if elected president, he would continue to support Israel's security and not deal with the militant Palestinian movement Hamas unless it renounced terrorism. | |
Mr Obama is trying to court Jewish voters disappointed by his expressed willingness to negotiate with countries like Iran, say correspondents; he is not doing as well among Jewish voters as Mrs Clinton, they add. | |
'Social occasion' | 'Social occasion' |
Meanwhile, John McCain rejected the previous endorsement of a Texas evangelist preacher after an audio recording emerged of Reverend John Hagee saying that the Holocaust was God's way of getting the Jewish people "back to the land of Israel". | |
Mr McCain has invited Florida Governor Charlie Crist, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal and former Massachusetts Governor and one-time presidential candidate Mitt Romney to his Arizona home at the weekend. | |
Correspondents say the three men are high up on Mr McCain's list of possible vice-presidential candidates. | |
The McCain campaign denied that Mr McCain was holding the meetings with a view to selecting a running mate, saying the event was a purely social occasion. | |
'No comment' | |
Democratic party officials have told Associated Press that Mr Obama has privately asked Jim Johnson, the former CEO of government-sponsored mortgage company Fannie Mae, to head up a team to vet potential running mates. | |
Mr Johnson supervised similar operations for Democratic presidential candidates John Kerry in 2004 and Walter Mondale in 1984. | |
Mr Obama denied hiring Mr Johnson. "I'm not paying him any money. He is a friend of mine," he told AP. | Mr Obama denied hiring Mr Johnson. "I'm not paying him any money. He is a friend of mine," he told AP. |
He added: "I am not commenting on vice presidential matters because I have not won this nomination." | He added: "I am not commenting on vice presidential matters because I have not won this nomination." |
A spokesman for Hillary Clinton said that he was "not aware" of the New York senator undertaking a similar process. | A spokesman for Hillary Clinton said that he was "not aware" of the New York senator undertaking a similar process. |
But according to a report in Time magazine, Mrs Clinton's husband Bill is "pushing real hard" for Mr Obama to pick Mrs Clinton as his running mate, should he win the party's nomination. | But according to a report in Time magazine, Mrs Clinton's husband Bill is "pushing real hard" for Mr Obama to pick Mrs Clinton as his running mate, should he win the party's nomination. |
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