Former President Donald Trump says that he knows who he’s likely to choose as his running mate.
During a campaign stop in Philadelphia on June 22, the former president was asked by NBC whether he had made his pick already.
Former President Trump replied, “In my mind, yeah.”
The former president added that that person would “most likely” be at his first debate with President Joe Biden on June 27.
“They’ll be there,” former President Trump said. “I think we have a lot of people coming.”
But as of right now, former President Trump added, “nobody knows” who he has selected.
They are Sens. J.D. Vance (R-Ohio), Tim Scott (R-S.C.), and Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), as well as Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, and Dr. Ben Carson.
Speaking on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Mr. Burgum—seen as the frontrunner in the running mate race—opined that ultimately, former President Trump’s VP choice will have little impact on the outcome.
“I think we have to just look at the fact that President Trump could win this race regardless of who his vice president is,” Mr. Burgum said on June 23. “He’s got the luxury of not having to pick someone.”
Mr. Burgum argued that the last time the running mate had an impact on outcomes was in 1960, when then-candidate Lyndon B. Johnson led President John F. Kennedy to victory in Texas.
Others disagree with Mr. Burgum, saying that the stakes for VP selection are higher than normal this time around in the midst of former President Trump’s criminal trials and voters’ concerns about President Biden’s age.
Typically, the presidential running mate exerts little effect on voters’ choice for “the top of the ticket,” she said. But this year’s unparalleled circumstances are creating top-of-mind concerns for the former president, his potential running mate, and U.S. voters.
President Biden is running again with Vice President Kamala Harris.
The 45th president, meanwhile, has indicated on multiple occasions that he'll announce his running mate during the Republican National Convention, where he’s set to be formally nominated.
The convention will be held on July 15—just four days after former President Trump faces sentencing in his New York criminal case.
The outcome of that sentencing is still uncertain, as former President Trump faces the possibility of penalties including a fine, house arrest, probation, or imprisonment.
Regardless of which presumptive nominee wins in November, he would end his second term as the oldest president in U.S. history.