Hillary Clinton for vice president: The rumor that just wont die

On Wednesday night, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton sat down with CNNs Wolf Blitzer to talk about the various threats that face the United States across the globe .. and whether she is going to replace Vice President Joe Biden on the national ticket in 2012.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (L) gestures as she meets with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov (unseen) at the NATO Headquarters in Brussels in Brussels on April 19, 2012. JACQUELYN MARTIN/AFP/Getty ImagesHeres the exchange:

BLITZER: If the president of the United States says, Madame Secretary I need you on the ticket this year in order to beat Romney, are you ready to run as his vice presidential running mate?

CLINTON: That is not going to happen. Thats like saying if the Olympic Committee called you up and said, Are you ready to run the marathon would you accept. Well, it is not going to happen.

So, youre telling me theres a chance?!

There is no rumor more impossible to knock down than the idea that President Obama might swap Clinton in for Biden at the last moment. Clinton has denied it in every way possible. Everyone around her insists it wont happen. And yet, still the idea lives on.

Hoping to find out why the Clinton-as-vice-president rumor is so persistent as to be immune from facts, we sought a number of loyalists of the former New York senator seeking guidance.

Clinton is catnip for cable, said Phil Singer, who served as a senior aide on the former senators 2008 presidential campaign. Shes a political icon with a job that keeps her abo! ve the f ray and has numbers that most pols would kill for, so its not a surprise that people are talking.

All true. Clinton does have stratospherically high poll numbers; a September 2011 CNN survey pegged her favorable rating at an eye-popping 69 percent. Just 26 percent viewed the formerly polarizing ex-first lady unfavorably. (Bidens favorable/unfavorable score in that same poll was far less healthy: 42 percent saw him favorably, 41 percent unfavorably.)

Another Clinton ally was also quick to lay the blame for the ongoing Clinton-Biden swap at the feet of the media. The press has got to stop writing about their favorite imaginary campaign and just cover the real one, which is plenty interesting, said the source.

And yet the blame the media sentiment, while common, doesnt get at the full picture of why Hillary on the national ticket still captivates. (Anecdote worth noting: At every talk the Fix gives and we give them from time to time one of the first questions is about the idea of a Clinton-Biden swap. We never bring it up.)

One Clinton supporter provided three reasons none on which included the media for why the idea of a veep swap remains alive and well.

A) Her 2008 supporters remain fervent, wrote the source in an email to the Fix. B) Some 2008 Obama supporters have buyers remorse/guilt. C) Her numbers are off the charts because she has been out of politics and done a good job as Secretary of State.

That seems to strike at the heart of the never-say-die-ness of the rumors about Clinton for vice president (or for president in 2016). She retains a loyal base within the party these people are also loyal to Obama but hold Hillary more dear and has, if anything, strengthened her image as a major political figure in the years since she took on the Secretary of State job.

Figuring out the genesis of the rumor or at least the perpetual motion machine that keeps it circulating doesnt change the fundamental reality of why Clinton wont be on the ticket.

To swa p Biden, who has done nothing major wrong since coming onto the ticket back in 2008, for Clinton would reek of panic within the White House. It would be cast, almost certainly, as Obama throwing a hail mary pass not exactly the message an incumbent president wants to be sending.

But remember, just because it wont happen doesnt mean people will stop talking about it. These are the Clintons after all. And this is politics.

Kissell joins Blue Dogs: The shrinking Blue Dog caucus is increasing its ranks for the moment, at least thanks to Rep. Larry Kissell (D-N.C.), who just joined the group of conservative-leaning Democrats. There are now 25 Blue Dogs, but five are retiring or running for higher office.

Ive always said Im not much of a joiner, but I believe that a strong moderate presence is needed, and thats why I have joined the Blue Dog Coalition, Kissell said in a statement.

Redistricting has made Kissells reelection prospects much dicier, and belonging to a group that has often clashed with Democratic leadership can probably only help him in a new district that went 57 percent for Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) in the 2008 presidential race. (Kissells old district was about 10 points more Democratic.)

New Hispanic data from GOP group: Resurgent Republic, a Republican polling organization, is out with a nifty new infographic designed to help conservatives reach out to Hispanic voters.

The GOP faces a significant deficit with a rapidly growing demographic that risks its future political prospects. Along with some interesting data, the Resurgent Republic site makes the case that Republicans can connect to Latinos on a number of issues.

Mourdock faces party investigation: Indiana state Treasurer Richard Mourdock, who is challenging Sen. Dick Lugar (R), is being probed by the state GOP after after allegations that the candidate improperly accessed the partys voter files.

In an email obtained by the AP, Mourdocks campaign manager asked staffers to start pillaging email addresses from Salesforce, a database used by Indiana Republicans.

Its been a great couple weeks for Mourdock an an internal poll Wednesday showed Mourdock at 42 percent and Lugar at 41 this investigation could do some damage to the tea party-backed candidate and bolster Lugar a bit.

Fixbits:

Congress asks for a quick resolution to the Secret Service scandal.

Rick Perry says he wants to run for president again in 2016.

A poll shows a tight race in New Hampshire between Mitt Romney and Obama.

Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) launches an ad in Rhode Island.

Must Reads:

The Romneys Dancing Horse Competes Without Them Matthew Mosk, ABC News

Newt Gingrichs Georgia backers in Congress say theyll stick with him Daniel Malloy, Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The year of the surrogate Maggie Haberman and Emily Schultheis, Politico