A senior Obama adviser told The Associated Press
on condition of anonymity Tuesday that the Illinois senator and his
choice for vice president will appear in Springfield, Ill., at the
former state Capitol where Abraham Lincoln once served.
The last time Obama appeared there he announced he was running for president.
Obama
strategist Anita Dunn sidestepped the question of whether the event
would be Obama's first appearance with his vice presidential pick, but
suggested the two wouldn't necessarily be related. The campaign's
announcement Tuesday said only that Obama would begin the trip to his
party's national convention at Saturday's event. The Democratic
convention begins Monday in Denver.
"We could pick up the VP. any time," Dunn said.
The campaign has said it will announce the choice via cell phone text message to supporters.
The
list of possibilities, meanwhile, is believed to be down to Delaware
Sen. Joe Biden, Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius, Indiana Sen. Evan Bayh
and Virginia Gov. Tim Kaine, who planned to campaign in his home state
Thursday with Obama.
At a town-hall meeting Tuesday night in
Raleigh, N.C., Obama repeatedly said "he" when discussing the qualities
he sought in a potential running mate, even as campaign officials
cautioned reporters not to read too much into his choice of pronouns.
"Let
me tell you first what I won't do: I won't hand over my energy policy
to my vice president and not know necessarily what he's doing," Obama
told the audience. "My vice president ... will be a member of the
executive branch. He won't be one of these fourth branches of
government where he thinks he's above the law," he said, an apparent
reference to Vice President Dick Cheney's handling of the office.
Those thought to be on Obama's short list stayed mum.
Biden
coyly told reporters staking out his Delaware home, "I'm not the guy."
Sebelius, in an interview with the AP before stumping for Obama in
Michigan, professed no inside knowledge of when word would come.
"A
week from tomorrow we will all know," she said, referring to the
running-mate acceptance speech set for next Wednesday at the convention.
Only
Obama, his wife, Michelle, a handful of his most senior advisers and
his two-member search committee know for certain who has made the cut.
The running mate decision also looms large for McCain, too.
In
hopes of grabbing the post-convention spotlight from Obama, McCain is
considering announcing his choice in the few days between the end of
the Democratic convention in Denver and the start of the Republican
gathering in St. Paul, Minn.
McCain's top contenders are said to
include Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt
Romney. Other possible choices are former Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge,
an abortion-rights supporter, and Connecticut Sen. Joe Lieberman, the
Democratic vice presidential pick in 2000 who now is an independent.
Underscoring
how seriously McCain may be considering Ridge or Lieberman, Republican
officials say top McCain advisers have been reaching out to big donors
and high-profile delegates in key states to gauge the impact of putting
an abortion-rights supporter on the GOP ticket.
But conservative
radio host Rush Limbaugh warned that the GOP base "will totally turn on
McCain" if he picks an abortion-rights running mate and predicted such
a move "will ensure his defeat."