Running Mates – De Kroon Amsterdam

John Nance Garner, a Texan who served as vice president under President Franklin Delano Roosevelt from 1933 to 1941, actually found his position unpleasant. John F. When Lyndon Johnson was asked about the prospect of appearing on the ballot with Kennedy, he reportedly said, “It’s not even worth a bucket of hot piss.”

He paged from Tim Walls, who was chosen by Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris Running mateIt’s hard to imagine that he actually considered the task subpar.

Walls’ good-natured image suggests that he never takes on any task, big or small, with reluctance. He’s hailed by enthusiastic Democrats as a guy who can borrow a pressure washer, coaches a local sports team, flips sausages on the barbecue and does other creative things. American Dad is carried out continuously.

Give the White House to someone you trust with your house keys, a campaign sentiment Walls wants to evoke.

Tim Walls looks like he’s straight out of an old American sitcom, but his exact opposite comes as a creature from the digital sphere. JD Vance’s interests are pale alt-right boys: ‘population’, women having fewer children, immigrants doing all kinds of horrible things. Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump’s chosen running mate may have his roots in a working-class community, but JD Vance was shaped by tech culture, not a happy anarchist hippie side.

Notably, a major Vans fan is Elon Musk, who reportedly played a key role in Trump’s selection for this vice presidential nomination.

On the net, America loves someone like Tim Walls

Both vice-presidential candidates are an extension of their top spot. Kamala Harris goes for happiness (‘Make America Smile Again’) And has chosen a running companion that enhances the lighting conditions. Donald Trump began his campaign with a promise of vengeance and retaliation. He has chosen a second to speak with the same bitterness about America, which is said to have loosened the reins too much on a social and cultural level and fallen into hopeless decline.

The first poll pitting Walls and Vance against each other is the most electorally promising choice. The survey found that 32 percent of Americans have a favorable opinion of Vance, compared to 39 percent of Wallace. The Washington Post; Forty-two percent have a strongly negative opinion of Vance, compared to thirty for Walls.

In short: Net-wise, America loves a guy like Walls and hates a guy like Vance. Now, the polls are polling and the election is still a while away, but it points to an underrated factor in American politics: the ability to generate sympathy.

What the Trump team also miscalculated was that the Republican’s charisma seemed to want to meddle in people’s private lives in all kinds of ways. Trump, for all his authoritarian tendencies, also has a libertarian nature (as his lifestyle illustrates). Vance, who focused on the family system, and his call to ban pornographic images did not. All in all, America is a liberal country that wants a helping hand, but doesn’t want to get piercing looks from its neighbors. In short, Walls is more than Vance. The battle is primarily between Harris and Trump, but their choice for the vice presidency illustrates the type of community they promise.

In that context, Walls says of longing for time to watch sports with your family “without complaining about politics all the time.” That nostalgia is the most shared sentiment in America right now. Appealing to it doesn’t guarantee victory for Democrats, but it does give them a new chance.

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