Richard Nixon once famously claimed that vice presidential candidates cannot help presidential candidates, they can only hurt. In <i>Do Running Mates Matter?</i> Professors Devine and Kopko exhaustively test this and numerous other claims regarding the importance of vice presidential candidates in the electoral process. While others have worked at various aspects of this question over the past few decades, this work is a data-driven yet highly accessible scholarly tour de force. A must-read for students of the presidency and presidential elections."—<b>Jody Baumgartner</b>, coauthor of <i>The American Vice Presidency: From the Shadow to the Spotlight</i><p> "Running mates matter, but in unexpected ways. Devine and Kopko provide the most comprehensive, multimethod examination of running mates to date. They convincingly demonstrate that the largest impact is from an evaluation of presidential candidates’ decision-making process in the selection of vice presidential candidates."—<b>Janet M. Box-Steffensmeier</b>, Vernal Riffe Professor of Political Science, Ohio State University</p>
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Christopher J. Devine is assistant professor of political science at the University of Dayton.Kyle C. Kopko is associate professor of political science, associate dean, and director of the legal studies major at Elizabethtown College.