https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/elect...GTb?li=BBnb7Kz
Mr. Biden has pledged to select a woman as his nominee for vice president, and his advisers are 
vetting more than half a dozen people for the job. In recent weeks, amid ongoing demonstrations against racism and police violence, a number of prominent Democrats 
have pressed  Mr. Biden to select an African-American woman. And his search committee  has been reviewing at least five black women, one Latina and one  Asian-American candidate.
   
 Earlier this month, Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, a white  moderate, removed herself from consideration for vice president after  sustained criticism of her record as a prosecutor, and she publicly  urged Mr. Biden to put a woman of color on his ticket.
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In  the Times poll, four in five registered voters said that race shouldn’t  be a factor in Mr. Biden’s selection of a running mate. That group  included three-quarters of the black voters polled, and more than 8 in  10 white and Hispanic voters.
About a fifth of black voters said  they would like to see Mr. Biden choose a black running mate. The  largest group with that preference was very liberal voters, at 37  percent; 27 percent of voters with postgraduate degrees said the same.
The  poll asked respondents if they thought Mr. Biden should chose a black  running mate or a white running mate or if race shouldn’t be a factor.  The poll did not ask about the possibility that Mr. Biden could choose a  Latina or an Asian-American candidate, but he is seriously considering  women of both backgrounds.
In the six most important battleground  states, voters’ professed indifference to race was even stronger. Nine  in 10 registered voters in those states said race should not be a factor  in Mr. Biden’s choice of running mate, including 91 percent of black  voters and 85 percent of Hispanics.
The polls had margins of sampling error of 1.8 percentage points in the battleground states and 3 percentage points nationally.
Mr.  Biden’s eventual choice is certain to face intensive scrutiny, in part  because of Mr. Biden’s age. If he is elected, Mr. Biden, currently 77,  would be the oldest president ever on the day of his inauguration, and  he would turn 80 about halfway through his term, a reality that worries  some voters.
Mr. Biden 
has said  he is looking for someone who shares his overall approach to governing  and who would be prepared for the presidency “on Day 1.” He has also  said he would prefer a running mate with strengths that complement his  own, as well as someone who would be willing to challenge him rather  than being cowed by the office of the presidency.
Follow-up interviews with poll respondents suggested that many voters are in tune with Mr. Biden’s stated approach.
“I  don’t believe that the problems in America can be solved just by  having, for example, a black president or a black vice president,” said  Garfield Campbell, 54, of Scottsdale, Ariz., a poll respondent. Mr.  Campbell, who is black, continued, “The right person has to be someone  that can sort of counterbalance, or add value and strength, to Joe  Biden, in areas where he may not be as strong.”
Mr. Biden’s wide lead over President Trump in national polls — he was ahead 
by 14 percentage points  in a Times/Siena survey this week — could give him an unusually free  hand in choosing a running mate: He is not desperately seeking a  sidekick who could help him shake up the race, as John McCain did in  2008 when he put the charismatic but obscure Alaska governor, Sarah  Palin, on his ticket. Nor is Mr. Biden confronting questions about his  own readiness for the presidency, as Barack Obama did when he selected  Mr. Biden.
Christine Matthews, a Republican pollster who has been  critical of Mr. Trump, said that the political impact of Mr. Biden’s  selection might be limited because he is so far ahead in the race.
“It  matters less this year, because of his large lead and his appeal to  fairly broad constituencies,” said Ms. Matthews, adding that her own  view was that Mr. Biden ought to choose a black woman.
Yet the  size and diversity of Mr. Biden’s emerging coalition presents delicate  dynamics of its own, as his choice of running mate may well excite one  element of his political base at the cost of upsetting another.
Of  the women known to be under consideration, only a few have prominent  national profiles. None of the better-known women appeared in the poll  to be a runaway favorite with voters.
Senator Elizabeth Warren of  Massachusetts was the best-known contender, and she was seen favorably  by 45 percent of registered voters and unfavorably by 42 percent. Ms.  Warren inspired the strongest reactions of any candidate tested in the  poll, with three-fifths of very liberal voters saying they had a very  favorable view of her and an equal share of very conservative voters  expressing a strongly negative view. A majority of moderate voters had a  somewhat or very favorable opinion of her.
In the swing states,  Ms. Warren’s favorability rating was evenly split, with 41 percent of  people saying they had a favorable view and the same share saying the  opposite.
Ellen Schiffman Adelstein, 78, of Tucson, said she  admired Ms. Warren’s work on consumer protection matters but worried  that her positions on issues like health care were too far to the left,  posing a risk to the ticket if Mr. Biden selected her.
“I want a new president,” Ms. Schiffman Adelstein said. “I don’t want anything to mess up getting a new president in there.”
But  Khalil Skerritt, 30, of Tallahassee, said that Ms. Warren would push  Mr. Biden to move urgently on promises of structural reform.
“She’ll  be the one to be like, ‘No, we have four years to get stuff done,’”  said Mr. Skerritt, who supported Bernie Sanders in the Democratic  primary.
Senator Kamala Harris of California, another well-known  candidate in the vetting process, had similarly mixed numbers, with 40  percent of voters expressing a favorable view and 35 percent seeing her  unfavorably. Two-thirds of black voters had a positive impression of Ms.  Harris, a few percentage points better than Ms. Warren.
Ms.  Harris was somewhat less well known in the battleground states and  showed few pronounced points of strength or weakness there. Thirty-five  percent of swing-state voters said they had a favorable view of her, and  30 percent said the opposite.
The public was far less familiar  with two other black women under consideration: Representative Val  Demings of Florida, a former police chief who is among the most serious  vice-presidential prospects, was unknown to 4 in 5 voters both  nationally and in her expansive home state. Stacey Abrams, the former  Georgia governor candidate, was seen favorably by about a third of  registered voters nationwide but was unknown to nearly half.
Allison  Bryan-Harris, 41, of Eagle Lake, Fla., said she planned to cast an  unenthusiastic vote for Mr. Biden — “I could vote for a box at this  point,” she said — but expressed excitement about Ms. Abrams, calling  her “forward-thinking” and “progressive.”
Wilfredo Torres, 71,  aHispanic military retiree from Charlotte, N.C., favored Ms. Demings for  vice president, saying he believed “it’s a good time to have somebody  African-American on the ticket.” He also said her law enforcement  experience was an asset.
Two white women from the Midwest who have  spoken with Mr. Biden’s vetting team, Senator Tammy Baldwin of  Wisconsin and Gov. Gretchen Whitmer of Michigan, drew positive marks in  their home states, suggesting that either could be well positioned to  help Mr. Biden cement his lead in a key battleground.
But Mr.  Biden is already leading both of those states by substantial margins,  and it is not clear that he needs help from a running mate to lock up a  local victory.
A third Midwesterner, Senator Tammy Duckworth of Illinois, who is Asian-American, was also unknown to most voters.
Elaine  Meyer, of Detroit, spoke highly of Ms. Whitmer. But she added, “I don’t  want to lose her as governor.” A 41-year-old white librarian, she said  she hoped Mr. Biden would choose a black woman as his running mate.
Ms.  Meyer said she had seen Mr. Biden speak in person and found him to be  “engaging” and “very competent.” But she said she still found his age “a  little worrisome.”
Voters showed no interest in the idea that he  could pledge to serve just one term as president, a possibility briefly  debated by some of Mr. Biden’s advisers early in the presidential race.
Eighty-five  percent of registered voters nationwide said a one-term pledge would  make no difference in their decision to vote for or against Mr. Biden.
Rebecca  Wabish, a Biden supporter in New Hanover, Pa., said it was plain enough  to her that Mr. Biden would be a one-term president. For that reason,  Ms. Wabish, 67, said she hoped he would ensure there was “strong  leadership coming up behind him.”
“You don’t have to look so far  in the future: He’ll never make it through a second term because of his  age,” Ms. Wabish said. “I think what he has to do is get a very, very  strong V.P.”
AS Biden stated- He wants a VP prepared to be POTUS on "Day 1" - if biden lasts that long. 
Prepare for a virulent radical VP ascending to the Oval Office.  
Certainly a non-white for a"balance of coor on the ticket".
Candidates 
Brenda Snipes - history election fraud fits in perfectly with the LibDem values
Pramila Jayapal - is Indian dark enough of color - she is aradical marxist - that fits.
Stacy Abrams - too larger than life not to be seriously considered
Nazi Pelosi - not quite dark enough - but - she could change her makeup, or get her face tattooed.  To sit in the Oval Office - nazi pelosi would vote Republican. 
 Lizzo - perfect for the foes of criticism of he calorically enhanced.  Obesity rules!!
9500- perfect from an ideology and intellectually  bankrupt perspective - but needs to come out of the basement .  Baggage - YSL, Robespierre, Lenny bruce,  - all White males - a problem.
 
Other ideas for Biden gratefully considered - He has none of his Own!