Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty has been awarded a prime speaking slot at the Republican National Convention, joining at least five others at the St. Paul event who are considered potential running mates for Sen. John McCain.
Perhaps the most atypical convention speaker, and potential running mate, is Connecticut Sen. Joseph Lieberman, who ran for vice president as a Democrat in 2000 and is now an independent and one of McCain's strongest supporters.
For Pawlenty, the speaking role on the climactic last night of the Sept. 1-4 convention caps months campaigning for McCain, raising his national profile and speculation about his selection as a potential vice-presidential choice.
Although he is to speak before McCain's acceptance of the Republican presidential nomination, the scheduling shed no apparent light Wednesday on his running mate prospects. While Pawlenty was listed first among four people speaking before McCain, the order of the speeches hasn't been decided, said Melissa Subbotin, a spokeswoman for the GOP convention.
Pawlenty deflected questions from reporters Wednesday about the vice presidency after an event in the governor's reception room.
Also scheduled to speak during the convention are former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who battled McCain in the primaries, and former Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Ridge. Both are reported to be under consideration for McCain's ticket; Romney is to speak on Wednesday, Sept. 3, and Ridge on Tuesday, Sept. 2.
The keynote address on Sept. 2, traditionally the marquee speech, will be reserved for former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani.
Awarding the address to Giuliani, who supports abortion rights, could irk some social conservatives but please more moderate members of the GOP. Ridge and Lieberman also support abortion rights.