December 9, 2025

Don’t Expect Biden’s VP Pick to Make or Break the 2020 Election

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Don't Expect Biden's VP Pick to Make or Break the 2020 Election

Don't Expect Biden's VP Pick to Make or Break the 2020 Election
Joe Biden removes a face mask before speaking at a Delaware rally on June 30. / AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

VP picks typically don’t sway elections, but they can reveal things about the presidential candidate’s intentions.


Don't Expect Biden's VP Pick to Make or Break the 2020 Election

By Dr. Christopher Devine
Assistant Professor of Political Science
University of Dayton


As presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden gets set to pick his vice presidential candidate, hereโ€™s a reality check: Running mates have very little direct effect on voters. When people go to the polls, they are primarily expressing a preference for the presidential candidate, not the second person on the ticket.

In our new book, โ€œDo Running Mates Matter?,โ€ my collaborator Kyle Kopko and I analyze half a century of political science survey data to examine what effect a running mate has on the success of presidential candidates.

In general, voters are very unlikely to choose a presidential ticket simply because they like or dislike the second-in-command.

Don't Expect Biden's VP Pick to Make or Break the 2020 Election
Picking Jack Kemp, right, as his running mate didnโ€™t help 1996 Republican nominee Bob Dole win the election. / J. David Ake/AFP via Getty Images

On rare occasions, voters can be swayed by running mates who are much more โ€“ or less โ€“ popular than their partyโ€™s main candidate. For instance, John Kerryโ€™s vice presidential candidate in 2004, former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards, was relatively popular with voters early in the campaign. And, as our research shows, Edwardsโ€™ popularity made voters more likely to vote for Kerry, at least in the short term.

Some political analysts believe a vice presidential selection could draw key voters from that personโ€™s own demographic group or their home state. We found that rarely happens, either.

However, we found that voters view vice presidential choices as new information about the main candidate โ€“ and that information can shift votersโ€™ views and change votes. The candidateโ€™s choice gives voters insight into who the candidate really is, what he or she stands for and how the person might operate once in office.

Take the 2008 presidential election, for example, when Democrat Barack Obama ran against Republican John McCain with Joe Biden and Sarah Palin as their respective vice presidential nominees.

In our book, we demonstrate that voters who doubted Palinโ€™s qualifications also were more likely to doubt McCainโ€™s judgment and think he was too old to be president. As a result, they were less likely to vote for McCain.

Don't Expect Biden's VP Pick to Make or Break the 2020 Election
John McCain, right, picked Sarah Palin, second from left, as his running mate in 2008. / Rachael Dickson/Wikimedia Commons

Conversely, our analysis also showed that voters who believed Biden was well qualified for office were more likely to approve of Obamaโ€™s judgment โ€“ and less likely to think he was too young to be president. As a result, they were more likely to vote for Obama.

In 2020, Joe Biden is already well known as an experienced former vice president, so itโ€™s unlikely his running mate will outshine him on her own. But with this choice, Biden has a valuable opportunity to define himself as a candidate โ€“ and a potential president โ€“ in his own right.

What does he really stand for? What are his political priorities? And does he have the good judgment to be president?

Bidenโ€™s selection will help voters to answer these questions โ€“ and to decide whether he deserves their support in November.


Originally published by The Conversation, 07.02.2020, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution/No derivatives license.