Opinion | Why Walz-Vance US vice-presidential debate is more than a sideshow
This debate matters, given the increased influence of the office and Donald Trump’s advanced age
History underlines the crucial role that vice-presidents, stepping up in the way Vance might have to, have played in times of geopolitical tensions, which today include Ukraine and the Middle East. Harry Truman exemplifies this: he was vice-president from only January to April 1945 before assuming the presidency after Franklin D. Roosevelt died soon after winning his fourth election.
Within weeks of entering the top job, Truman made several highly consequential decisions, including the dropping of atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. He also attended the landmark Potsdam conference with the Soviet Union and Britain to decide how to administer the defeated Nazi Germany.
Walz, 60, has significant experience as governor of Minnesota, and also served for more than a decade in the US House of Representatives. There are few doubts he could effectively assume the top job.