Julian Castro has the chops to be vice president of the United States.
I’ll lay that out right now. He’s as qualified to be VP as, say, Dan Quayle or Spiro Agnew. Heck, even Richard Nixon was considered a young buck when Dwight Eisenhower selected him to run as vice president in 1952; then again, Ike could have run with a trained chimpanzee and still been elected in a landslide that year.
Castro’s stock as a potential running mate on a Democratic ticket led by Hillary Rodham Clinton appears to be rising.
The Big Question: Does Castro’s presence on a Democratic presidential ticket deliver Texas to the Democrats? It’s not going to happen.
However, it could make Texas more competitive than it otherwise would be.
http://www.texastribune.org/2015/06/12/houston-castro-avoids-veep-chatter/
Castro is the highly charismatic former mayor of San Antonio who now serves as housing secretary. He’s had his federal job for less than a year and wasn’t mayor of Texas’s second-largest city all that long before moving to Washington.
He did light up the Democratic National Convention in 2012 with a stirring keynote speech.
Castro’s ties to the Hispanic community are quite obvious, given his name. What’s more, the name “Castro” doesn’t carry quite the negative political baggage it once did in this country, given that Fidel Castro is now out of power in Cuba and the United States is on the verge of establishing normal diplomatic relations with its former enemy. Sure, it’s still a commie state, but it poses no threat to the United States of America.
These things occasionally have a way of reversing themselves. Someone else could emerge from nowhere to become the next favorite to join Hillary Clinton. Heck, someone else also could emerge — from the same nowhere — to bump Clinton out of her shoo-in status to become the Democrats’ next presidential nominee. Do I think either event will occur? Umm, no — definitely not the latter.
For now, it’s fun to watch Julian Castro navigate his way through the treacherous world of political punditry and speculation.
The young man already is adept at dodging the obvious questions that keep coming at him.