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Tag: Mike Pence

  • One Year After the Fall of Roe, Republicans Are Full Steam Ahead With National Abortion Ban

    One Year After the Fall of Roe, Republicans Are Full Steam Ahead With National Abortion Ban

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    This Saturday marks one year since the Supreme Court’s conservative majority overturned Roe v. Wade, ushering in an absolutely disastrous period for abortion rights. In the 12 months since 49 years of precedent was wiped out, abortion has been banned or restricted in 20 states. In Alabama, Arkansas, Idaho, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, and West Virginia, near-total bans are in effect. In Georgia and North Dakota, the medical procedure is prohibited after six weeks, a period when many people do not even know they’re pregnant. (Florida governor Ron DeSantis has also signed a six-week ban that is pending court ruling.) In Oklahoma, a woman with a nonviable pregnancy putting her life at risk was told to sit in a parking lot until her situation got worse. In Tennessee, a woman required a lifesaving hysterectomy after she was denied a medically necessary abortion. According to the Associated Press, “More than 25 million women ages 15 to 44, or about 2 in 5 nationally, now live in states where there are more restrictions on abortion access than there were before Dobbs.” In two states, obtaining an abortion can result in prison time.

    Not surprisingly, a majority of the voters in the country are deeply unhappy about all of this, with a majority of Americans saying abortion laws are too strict. Six in 10 say the Supreme Court was wrong to overturn Roe.

    The response from Republicans willing to discuss the matter? A push to further gut reproductive rights. Per The New Republic:

    .…on Tuesday, Representative Elise Stefanik indicated that she and her colleagues will introduce a bill banning abortion nationwide after 15 weeks. “The people are the most important voices” on abortion, Stefanik said, apparently not seeing the irony of her words. Speaking at an event to mark the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization ruling, hosted by the anti-abortion group Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, Stefanik argued that the federal government does have a role in abortion legislation, particularly in “building consensus” nationally on the topic. “We should embrace this debate,” Stefanik said.

    Stefanik’s announcement takes Republicans’ war on abortion rights to the next level. Last year, when Senator Lindsey Graham introduced a federal 15-week abortion ban just before the midterms, many of his colleagues slammed the move. The bill never made it to the Senate floor. But Stefanik is signaling that more Republicans are ready to embrace a national ban.

    As TNR notes, “there is already a national consensus on abortion rights,” and it’s that abortion should be legal in “all or most cases.” Republicans, though, have a long history of not caring about the will of the people, and one person who definitely doesn’t care about what Americans want when it comes to abortion is 2024 presidential candidate Mike Pence, who on Friday insisted every GOP candidate must support a national abortion ban.

    https://twitter.com/DNCWarRoom/status/1672249691172659200

    Last month, Donald Trump—who, unlike Pence, actually has a chance of winning the GOP nomination—bragged that he’d managed to kill the national right to an abortion, saying: “After 50 years of failure, with nobody coming even close, I was able to kill Roe v. Wade, much to the ‘shock’ of everyone, and for the first time put the Pro Life movement in a strong negotiating position over the Radicals that are willing to kill babies even into their 9th month,* and beyond.** Without me there would be no 6 weeks, 10 weeks, 15 weeks, or whatever is finally agreed to. Without me the pro Life movement would have just kept losing. Thank you President TRUMP!!!” Then he claimed that in a second term, he’s going to “make a really great deal” on abortion.

    *This is obviously not true.

    **This would mean after the baby is born, so also not true.

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    Lindsey Graham: I’m for federalism except for when I’m not

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    Fact-check: Republicans absolutely started this culture war

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  • 6/22: America Decides

    6/22: America Decides

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    6/22: America Decides – CBS News


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    Texas GOP Will Hurd announces 2024 WH bid; Who competes with Trump for Evangelical support

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  • GOP Finally Decides To Rally Behind Herman Cain

    GOP Finally Decides To Rally Behind Herman Cain

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    WASHINGTON—Having long sought to place a viable alternative to Donald Trump at the head of the party’s ticket, top GOP power brokers finally decided Thursday to rally behind the late Herman Cain for president in 2024. “After much discussion with my fellow Republicans, I have decided to back Herman Cain as our party’s presidential nominee,” Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell said in an announcement that followed similar statements from candidates Ron DeSantis, Nikki Haley, Mike Pence, and Chris Christie, all of whom dropped out of the race to endorse the Covid-19 victim and former Godfather’s Pizza CEO. “Though some may raise concerns about his lack of prior electoral success and his current status as a deceased person, those are all merely distractions. A lot of people forget Mr. Cain was our party’s frontrunner in the 2012 race until he was sidelined by accusations of sexual misconduct, something that is no longer an impediment to a Republican seeking public office. And polls show swing voters and independents are more likely to see him as a sympathetic figure since his tragic death three years ago.” A Quinnipiac University Poll released earlier this week found that nine in 10 registered voters described Cain as only “slightly less alive” than President Joe Biden.

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  • Mike Pence Has Sudden Epiphany That Trump May Have Done Some Very Bad Things

    Mike Pence Has Sudden Epiphany That Trump May Have Done Some Very Bad Things

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    Republican presidential hopeful Mike Pence, perhaps due to his historically lousy poll numbers, has finally decided to hit Donald Trump where it hurts. During a CNBC interview Wednesday, shortly after Trump was arraigned in his classified-records scandal, the former veep said that he “cannot defend what is alleged” in the former president’s indictment. It “contains serious charges,” he added, noting that Trump allegedly created “an opportunity where highly sensitive classified material could have fallen into the wrong hands.” (Trump pleaded not guilty to all counts.)

    The comments are a remarkable departure from the tack Pence took just a week ago: Speaking before a CNN town hall last Wednesday, Pence had urged the Justice Department not to indict his former boss, arguing that such a move would sow discord at home and send a “terrible message” abroad. He also refused to rule out the possibility of pardoning Trump should he win the presidency, and decried the FBI’s decision to search Trump’s Mar-a-Lago home last year.

    Still, a hint of that same sentiment was present in Pence’s about-face this week. Parroting an argument made by Trump’s own surrogates, Pence criticized a “two-tiered justice system” that gave a “pass” to Hillary Clinton in 2016 over the private email server she used as secretary of state to share sensitive materials. (Unlike Trump, Clinton did not store or share any documents marked as classified on the server.)

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    “I just can’t believe that politics didn’t play some role here,” Pence added. “If I have the privilege to be president of the United States, we’re going to clean house at the Department of Justice…and we’re going to restore public confidence in equal treatment under the law.”

    Like other Republican presidential hopefuls, Pence could have a better shot at winning should the records case impede Trump, who is leading his closest primary rival, Florida governor Ron DeSantis, by more than 30 points on average. Pence, who announced his candidacy last week, is currently polling at around 5% nationally among likely Republican voters, despite entering the race with better name recognition than the rest of the field outside of Trump and possibly DeSantis. In fact, Pence’s celebrity might actually be hurting him in the primary: The former veep has taken near-constant hits from Trump over the past two-and-a-half years—largely over his refusal to back an election reversal scheme that Trump’s team planned on January 6, 2021—which might explain why a broad swath of the right is openly hostile toward him.

    But that hasn’t stopped him from attempting a delicate balancing act that involves both attacking Trump and offering concessions to the Trump supporters he’d need to mount a successful campaign. “I think millions of Americans are deeply troubled by this indictment,” he told The Wall Street Journal shortly after describing Trump’s actions—detailed in Tuesday’s indictment—as indefensible. “My bottom line is this: I think the American people have lost confidence in the Department of Justice.” Pence deployed a similar line in the aftermath of January 6, condemning the Capitol mob’s violence while also echoing the false claims of “election fraud” that they used to justify their attack.

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    Caleb Ecarma

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  • Pence Berates DOJ For Indicting Trump Over Handling Of Top-Secret Documents

    Pence Berates DOJ For Indicting Trump Over Handling Of Top-Secret Documents

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    GREENSBORO, N.C. — Former Vice President Mike Pence on Saturday criticized the Department of Justice, rather than Donald Trump, for a devastating 37-count indictment accusing his former boss of conspiring to hide top-secret documents from authorities seeking their return.

    “The American people have a right to know the basis of this decision,” Pence told North Carolina Republicans gathered for their state convention, where Trump was scheduled to speak just hours later. “Attorney General Merrick Garland, stop hiding behind the special counsel and stand before the American people and explain why this indictment went forward.”

    Pence, as he was leaving following his 40 minutes on the stage, ignored repeated questions from reporters asking if he had read the indictment and if he believed it would’ve come had Trump turned over improperly retained classified documents when the FBI requested them.

    Pence’s choice to blame prosecutors for charging Trump with a crime — rather than Trump for refusing to turn over hundreds of the documents, even in the face of a subpoena — aligns him with most other candidates running for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination against Trump.

    Biotech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy went so far as to promise to pardon Trump on his first day in office, should he win.

    Only former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie have said Trump is to blame for his own troubles and that his behavior made him unfit for the presidency.

    After the FBI searched Trump’s Florida country club following his failure to turn over all the classified documents in his possession last summer, and after aides to Joe Biden also discovered files at the Democratic president’s home, Pence looked through his own residence and similarly found classified material. He called in the FBI, resulting in further searches. The DOJ announced recently that its investigation into Pence had been closed with no charges.

    “I took full responsibility, and I was pleased the Department of Justice concluded it was an innocent mistake,” he said at a campaign stop Friday in New Hampshire. “But it was a mistake. We must secure our nation’s secrets.”

    Pence was nearly killed during Trump’s Jan. 6, 2021, coup attempt in Washington. A mob, brought to a boiling rage as Trump criticized Pence for lacking the “courage” to help overturn his 2020 election loss, came within yards of encountering Pence at the Capitol. Many of Trump’s followers chanted, “Hang Mike Pence,” as they roamed the halls looking for him.

    Despite this, Pence has remained measured in his criticisms of Trump. Only in his campaign announcement last week did Pence say, for the first time, that Trump’s behavior after the 2020 election through the Jan. 6 insurrection disqualified him from being president again.

    He has echoed that belief in subsequent appearances, and did so again Saturday in North Carolina.

    “Anyone who puts themselves over the Constitution should never be president of the United States,” Pence said in his remarks. Republicans at the Sheraton ballroom in Greensboro offered polite applause as Pence explained his actions on Jan. 6, when he refused Trump’s demands.

    Melissa Crespo, a delegate from the Lincoln County party committee, said she absolutely could not support Pence.

    “I feel like he should not run against Trump. I just feel like that’s disloyal,” she said. “He’s betraying the people who supported him as vice president.”

    Pence’s “First in Freedom” luncheon brought in 600 convention-goers, who paid $75 each to attend the fundraiser. His was one of three ticketed meals the party is holding. A dinner featuring fellow GOP hopeful Ron DeSantis attracted about 900 attendees who paid $150 a ticket, while a Saturday night dinner with Trump sold nearly 1,000 tickets at $150 each.

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  • Mike Pence Officially Enters 2024 Republican Presidential Race

    Mike Pence Officially Enters 2024 Republican Presidential Race

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    Former Vice President Mike Pence announced he’s running for president, setting up a battle for the Republican nomination with his former boss, Donald Trump. What do you think?

    “He’s definitely got a broad coalition of people who hate him.”

    Tariq Bringelson, Unemployed

    “God’s going to have a tough time picking a side.”

    Francesca Wilkes, Evidence Collector

    “Wait, that’s Mike Pence? Who did I hang then?”

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  • Mike Pence: Donald Trump Should Never Be President Again—But I Could Still Support Him

    Mike Pence: Donald Trump Should Never Be President Again—But I Could Still Support Him

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    Donald Trump is a fake conservative and a traitor to the Constitution. That’s the message in a new ad from a Mike Pence–aligned super PAC, an all-out assault on the former president—and prohibitive 2024 favorite—that’s been rare among Republican contenders.

    Amidst a montage of images showing Trump supporters storming the Capitol, a narrator can be heard alluding to Trump as a “weak man” who begged Pence “to ignore the Constitution” in his quest to maintain power. Hailing Pence as a “man of courage and character” who stood up to a mob that wanted him dead, the spot then accuses Trump of failing the test of leadership on that day and beyond. (In reality, Pence’s role around January 6 wasn’t completely a profile in courage.) “Since then, this so-called leader has continued to abandon our conservative principles,” the ad continues, referencing Trump’s spurning of antiabortion advocates.

    The Committed to America PAC ad, which is part of a $250,000 media buy and will air in Iowa over the next two weeks, also makes allusions to the right’s raging culture war. “Now, with a woke mob trying to take away our freedom,” the narrator declares over a photo of transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney, “we need a president who won’t flinch, who won’t try to cut deals with our values—a president with the courage and the faith to lead us through turbulent times.” 

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    Bobby Saparow, the executive director of Committed to America, used the ad’s release to differentiate his PAC’s candidate from other Republicans seeking the nomination. “Mike Pence has proven he won’t back down to Trump, where is the rest of the field?” said Saparow. “This ad sets the tone for what you can expect from us. No issue will be off-limits for our operation.”

    During his campaign kickoff address Wednesday, Pence made cutting comments about his old boss. “When Donald Trump ran for president in 2016, he promised to govern as a conservative, and together we did just that,” he said. “Today, he makes no such promise.” At one point Pence even attempted to decouple Trump from the broader movement. The antiabortion cause, he noted, was a staple of conservatism “long before Donald Trump was ever a part of it. Now he treats it as an inconvenience, even blaming election losses in 2022 on overturning Roe v. Wade.” In regard to Trump’s actions on January 6, meanwhile, Pence concluded that he “should never be president of the United States again.”

    And yet, not long after, Pence said in a Fox News interview that he would support the Republican nominee, which could very well be Trump. Later, at a CNN town hall, Pence urged the Justice Department not to indict Trump for his handling of classified documents and didn’t rule out pardoning his former boss if he were convicted of a crime. “I don’t want to speak about hypotheticals,” Pence said regarding pardons. “I’m not sure I’m going to be elected president of the United States, but I believe we have a fighting chance.”

    Of course, the odds of Pence actually besting Trump in the primary contest are very slim. A compilation of Republican primary polls puts his support at around 5% nationally, according to FiveThirtyEight, while early polling out of Iowa and New Hampshire has him in the low single digits.

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    Caleb Ecarma

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  • John Dickerson on the presidency as an office of character

    John Dickerson on the presidency as an office of character

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    John Dickerson on the presidency as an office of character – CBS News


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    Mike Pence defined the presidency Wednesday as he has throughout his career: as an office of character. John Dickerson explains.

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  • Mike Pence Compares Gender Transition Treatments For Kids To Getting A Tattoo

    Mike Pence Compares Gender Transition Treatments For Kids To Getting A Tattoo

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    Former Vice President Mike Pence said states should bar Americans younger than 18 from receiving any gender transition procedures, adding his strong support to Republican efforts to target transgender minors.

    Pence, who announced his bid for the 2024 Republican presidential nomination this week, made the comments during CNN’s latest town-hall-style event with GOP candidates. The former vice president told moderator Dana Bash that although he supported restoring parents’ rights in schools and ending “politically correct nonsense,” he didn’t believe a parent should be able to decide if their child should be allowed to transition or seek medical care for gender dysphoria.

    “I strongly support state legislation that bans all gender transition, chemical or surgical procedures, for kids under the age of 18,” Pence said. “I’m talking as a father and I’m talking as a grandfather right now. There’s a reason you don’t let kids get a tattoo before they’re 18.”

    Bash pressed Pence on his previous comments that parents should be in control of what their kids hear in schools and asked what he would say to trans kids who felt targeted by Republican efforts to limit access to medical care.

    “I would tell them that I love everybody. I’d put my arm around them and their parents. But before they had a chemical or surgical procedure, I would say wait, just wait,” he said. “Most people before you’re 18 years of age, there’s a reason we got that cutoff for all kinds of categories in our society.

    “You just don’t really know what you want in life. You don’t know who you are. It takes time to become an adult, figure that out.”

    Pence went on to claim that mental health experts agreed with his statements. That’s not true.

    The American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Medical Association have both said such care is medically necessary for trans kids, saying decisions about care should be decided by parents, children and their doctors, not lawmakers. Medical experts have long said accessing care saves lives, but recent efforts to limit those service have already had a negative impact on the mental health of trans youth.

    The former vice president, however, said a radical gender ideology was “afoot” in America, taking hold of schools and universities.

    “However adults want to live, they can live, but for children, we’re going to protect kids from radical gender ideology,” Pence said. “The state has the obligation to see to [their] safety and health and the wellbeing.”

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  • Takeaways from CNN’s town hall with Mike Pence | CNN Politics

    Takeaways from CNN’s town hall with Mike Pence | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    Former Vice President Mike Pence staked out a series of clear differences with boss-turned-2024 rival Donald Trump, and needled other Republican contenders, including Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, in a CNN town hall in Iowa on Wednesday night.

    Hours after he launched his bid for the Republican presidential nomination, Pence broke with the former president on immigration policy, entitlement spending, US support for Ukraine in its war against Russia and more.

    He said he would not reinstate the policy of separating migrant families at the border – a widely criticized practice that Trump didn’t rule out reviving in his own CNN town hall last month.

    Pence also said that other Republican rivals were wrong to put changes to Social Security off the table, telling the crowd at Grand View University in Des Moines that seriously reducing federal spending will require changes to entitlement programs.

    He sharply rebuked Trump for describing Russian President Vladimir Putin as a “genius” for his invasion of Ukraine, while casting DeSantis as naive on the issue. And he continued to criticize the former president’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election.

    Pence said he and Trump don’t just disagree about the past; the two have “a different vision for our party.”

    “I’m somebody who believes in American leadership in the world. Our party needs to lead on fiscal responsibility and stand without apology for life. We’ll have those debates,” he said.

    Still, Pence said, he will “support the Republican nominee in 2024,” a pledge he said he felt comfortable making because he doubted Trump would win the primary.

    “Different times call for different leadership,” Pence said. “The American people don’t look backwards; they look forward. … I don’t think my old running mate is going to be the Republican nominee for president.”

    Here are six takeaways from Pence’s CNN town hall:

    Pence urged the Justice Department not to indict his onetime boss, saying such an indictment would fuel division inside the country and “send a terrible message to the wider world.”

    While Pence said that “no one is above the law,” he said the DOJ could resolve its investigation into Trump’s potential mishandling of classified documents without resorting to an indictment, just as the department informed Pence’s attorney last week that there would be no charges brought in the case of the classified documents discovered in his home.

    But in Pence’s case, the former vice president immediately contacted the National Archives and the FBI to return his documents, while Trump resisted handing over his classified material and failed to return all classified documents after receiving a subpoena last May.

    Pence’s response underscores the tightrope the former vice president is walking when it comes to the numerous probes into his former boss. CNN reported Wednesday that the Justice Department had informed Trump he’s a target of special counsel Jack Smith’s investigation into the mishandling of classified documents and possible obstruction, a sign that prosecutors may be moving closer to indicting the former president.

    While Pence criticized Trump for his actions on January 6 at his campaign kickoff Wednesday and at the town hall, he sought to distinguish those actions from the documents probe, protesting that there were “dozens” of better ways that the FBI could have handled Trump’s case before resorting to an unprecedented search the former president’s residence.

    So far, Pence’s sharpest criticism of Trump came when he was asked about the United States’ role in helping Ukraine in its efforts to repel Russia’s invasion.

    After arguing that the US should accelerate its support for the Ukrainian military, Pence pointed to Trump’s description of Putin in a February 2022 radio interview as a “genius” for his invasion of Ukraine.

    “I know the difference between a genius and a war criminal, and I know who needs to win the war in Ukraine,” Pence said. “And it’s the people fighting for their freedom and fighting to restore their national sovereignty in Ukraine. And America – it’s not our war, but freedom is our fight. And we need to give the people of Ukraine the ability to fight and defend their freedom.”

    Pence’s comments align him with Nikki Haley, Trump’s United Nations ambassador and a 2024 rival, and against their former boss and DeSantis, who entered the GOP race last month. The former vice president echoed Haley’s veiled shot at DeSantis – who described the war as a “territorial dispute” – casting such characterizations as naive.

    “Anybody that thinks Vladimir Putin will stop if he overruns Ukraine has what we say back in Indiana, another thing coming,” Pence said. “He has no intention of stopping. He’s made it clear that he wants to recreate that old Soviet sphere of influence in Eastern Europe.”

    Pence participates in a CNN Republican Presidential Town Hall on Wednesday.

    Pence repeatedly highlighted his support for “parents’ rights,” especially when it comes to schools. But he said the judgment of those same parents should not apply to situations when a minor is seeking gender transition care.

    “I strongly support state legislation, including, as we did in Indiana, that bans all gender transition, chemical or surgical procedures, under the age of 18,” he said – even when parents support their child’s decision to go forward.

    Republican presidential candidates have all railed against what Pence on Wednesday described as “radical gender ideology,” language that by definition falsely suggests there is a movement of people seeking to convince young people to change their gender identities.

    “However adults want to live, they can live,” Pence said. “But for children, we’re going to protect kids from the radical gender ideology and say no chemical or surgical transition before you’re 18.”

    Pressed on the age question, Pence compared gender transition to body art, saying, “There’s a reason why you don’t let kids get a tattoo before they’re 18.”

    When Bash asked what he would say to children and families who feel targeted by his position and those of his ideological allies, Pence offered an olive branch of sorts.

    “I’d put my arm around them and tell them I love ‘em,” he said, “but (tell them) ‘Just wait.’”

    Pence speaks during a CNN Republican Presidential Town Hall moderated by CNN's Dana Bash at Grand View University in Des Moines, Iowa, on June 7.

    Pence has been a fierce anti-abortion advocate his entire adult life. On Wednesday night, he made clear he would not deviate from that position.

    “I couldn’t be more proud to be vice president in an administration that appointed three of the justices that sent Roe v. Wade to the ash heap of history,” Pence said, “and gave America a new beginning for life.”

    On the question of a federal ban on the procedure, Pence said he supported exceptions for rape, incest and life of the mother. But he did not tap dance around the fundamental question, even as voters around the country – in the midterms and in referendums – have registered their anger over the Supreme Court’s decision and the subsequent passage of state laws to sharply restrict abortion rights.

    “We will not rest or relent until we restore the sanctity of life to the center of American law in every state in the country,” Pence said.

    Still, the former vice president acknowledged that his side had a “long way to go to win the hearts and minds of the American people” and encouraged his allies to show both “principle and compassion.”

    To that end, he offered qualified support for social spending programs to help support newborns and new parents.

    “We have to care as much about newborns and mothers as we do about the unborn,” Pence said. But he stopped short of specifically endorsing paid family leave for all Americans or subsidized child care.

    Pence said he would “take a step back” from the approach of the Trump-era landmark sentencing reform law, known as the First Step Act.

    “We need to get serious and tough on violent crime, and we need to give our cities and our states the resources to restore law and order to our streets. And I promise you, we’ll do that, if I’m your president,” Pence told Bash.

    Under the First Step Act, thousands of federal inmates, most of them serving sentences for drug offense and weapons charges, were released from prison early, either for good behavior or through participation in rehabilitation programs. The law also eased mandatory minimum sentencing for certain drug offenders.

    Asked about DeSantis’ promise to repeal the First Step Act if elected president, Pence again conceded that he would take a different approach than the First Step Act.

    “We ought to be thinking about how we make penalties tougher on people that are victimizing families in this country,” he said.

    Pence repeated the criticism he has leveled at his former boss for more than a year, insisting that Trump was wrong to ask his second-in-command to overturn some states’ 2020 Electoral College votes in his ceremonial role presiding over Congress as it counted those votes on January 6, 2021.

    Pence said he “frankly hoped the president would come around” since early 2021. Though he said he agreed that some states inappropriately changed their election procedures during the coronavirus pandemic.

    “But at the end of the day, I think the Republican Party has to be the party of the Constitution,” he said.

    Pence also broke with Trump over the legal fates of those who rioted at the US Capitol on January 6 – and have since faced criminal charges and convictions. Trump said he would consider pardoning many of those rioters, who he said were being treated “very unfairly.”

    Pence, though, said the United States “cannot ever allow what happened on January 6 to happen again in the heart of our democracy.”

    “I have no interest or no intention of pardoning those that assaulted police officers or vandalized our Capitol. They need to answer to the law,” he said.

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  • 6/7: CBS News Mornings

    6/7: CBS News Mornings

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    6/7: CBS News Mornings – CBS News


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    Former Vice President Mike Pence enters 2024 presidential race; PGA Tour and LIV announce merger.

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  • The 2024 GOP Field Is Basically Donald Trump and His Mini-Mes

    The 2024 GOP Field Is Basically Donald Trump and His Mini-Mes

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    Trumpism is about destruction, about burning it all down, about a kind of partisanship in which Republicans are unwilling or unable to make any kind of bipartisan compromise. And yet, even in a party consumed for years by Trumpism, 149 Republicans voted last week with 165 Democrats to raise the debt ceiling and spare the American economy an unprecedented meltdown. Clearly, the burn it all down wing isn’t going away, with Matt Gaetz, Andy Biggs, and Ken Buck among the 71 Republicans who voted “no.” And it’s not like all members of the “yes” group, which includes Jim Jordan and Marjorie Taylor Greene, are suddenly sane. But the vote signaled that a majority of Republicans could embrace bipartisan governing, or at least some version of what that looks like in 2023.

    The 2024 Republican primary, however, is Trumpism run amok, with Donald Trump leading a pack of less charismatic mini-mes and little sign that the normal (a.k.a. pre-2016) GOP is coming back. Just head out to Iowa, where GOP candidates this past weekend were donning leather for Joni Ernst’s Roast and Ride. The New York Times noted that presidential candidates “barely touched” the economy, a subject “many voters expressed concern about.” Instead, the GOP primary crew, which didn’t include the field’s front-runner, railed “against ‘deep state’ bureaucrats, ‘woke’ corporations, and liberals indoctrinating and confusing America’s children.” Ron DeSantis’s team is clearly banking that MAGA red meat is what GOP primary voters will eat up. “The fight for the soul of the party isn’t about tax cuts or trade deals,” Jeff Roe, a top adviser to pro-DeSantis super PAC Never Back Down, told Axios. “It is this cultural combat that we have as a country.” 

    Perhaps it’s no surprise then to see even Republicans once considered more moderate diving headfirst into the culture wars. During a CNN town hall on Sunday, Nikki Haley blamed teenage girls’ suicides on trans kids playing sports, a completely preposterous lie and the kind of unusual cruelty that is associated with Trumpism. In Rye, New Hampshire, Haley squandered her time with voters at a “No BS Barbecue” by making fun of transgender influencer and right-wing target Dylan Mulvaney. “Make no mistake, that is a guy dressed up like a girl making fun of women,” she said. “Women don’t act like that. And you’ve got companies glorifying that.” As Semafor’s David Weigel wrote, “The repeated riff was meant to be the applause line for one of the top candidates running on their ability to win back moderates in the suburbs who have fled the Republican Party in the Donald Trump era” and the best response the riff got was “a mixture of groans and murmurs.” 

    It’s baffling to me why Haley would want to mimic Trump’s cruelty, but she’s not the only one. The GOP primary field is beating up on transgender people in ways that are both morally wrong and wildly unpopular. According to Pew, “Roughly eight-in-ten US adults say there is at least some discrimination against trans people in our society, and a majority favor laws that would protect transgender individuals from discrimination in jobs, housing, and public spaces.” Yet we find GOP candidates running as furious culture warriors targeting trans kids and bodily autonomy. Candidates Tim Scott, Haley, and Pence have expressed support for a  federal abortion ban

    Few dare mention Trump’s name on the campaign trail. Instead, they make vague callouts to the man, speaking in code, saying things about “rejecting a culture of losing (DeSantis)” or “it’s time for a new generational leader (Haley).” Pence criticized his former boss for recently congratulating Kim Jong Un, but still refused to use Trump’s name. “Whether it’s my former running mate or anyone else, no one should be praising the dictator in North Korea—or praising the leader of Russia, who has launched an unprovoked war of aggression in Ukraine.” Haley refused to criticize Trump for his Kim Jong Un bromance. 

    Some Republicans are talking loudly about the need to defeat Trump, like New Hampshire governor Chris Sununu, who at the same time announced Monday he wouldn’t be entering the 2024 race. Then there’s Chris Christie, who has been arguably the most critical of Trump so far and formally kicked off his bid Tuesday. But Christie has gone back and forth on Trump so many times he’s going to need his own lane on the George Washington Bridge. He took aim at Trump in 2016—and then endorsed him. Meanwhile, The Washington Post points out how Christie “is viewed negatively by many Republicans” and notes that “many prominent figures in the party who have vocally criticized Trump from a more traditional GOP posture in recent years have been rejected in party primaries.” 

    Another Republican candidate who has directly criticized Trump is former Arkansas governor Asa Hutchinson, who, following a jury in the E. Jean Carroll case finding Trump liable for sexual abuse and defamation, called the former president’s behavior “indefensible.” Hutchinson’s poll numbers are also low.  

    This year is starting to feel a lot like 2016, a primary field that contains Trump and all the other not-Trump candidates. The only difference between this contest and 2016 is that other candidates then ran (ostensibly, at least) as their own selves and not just lesser versions of the OG. Perhaps this is because the current crop of candidates have seen polling which shows the GOP base continues to struggle with a pronounced case of brain worms. They dismiss Trump’s critics out of hand and election denial runs deep, with 75% in one poll saying that Trump actually won the 2020 election. It’s possible that these 2024 candidates can’t figure out how to recon with a GOP base existing in a post-truth bubble, and are just trying to keep up with an electorate that’s completely lost its mind.

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    Molly Jong-Fast

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  • No charges for Pence in classified documents probe, Sources say

    No charges for Pence in classified documents probe, Sources say

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    No charges for Pence in classified documents probe, Sources say – CBS News


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    Former Vice President Mike Pence will not face criminal charges following an investigation into classified documents which were found at his Indiana home earlier this year, sources told CBS News Friday.

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  • CNN Announces Mike Pence Town Hall And Gets Brutally Mocked

    CNN Announces Mike Pence Town Hall And Gets Brutally Mocked

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    These days, CNN seems to be caught between two adages: “If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again,” and “Insanity is when you do the same thing repeatedly and expect different results.”

    On Thursday, the network announced that anchor Dana Bash would be hosting a Republican presidential town hall with former Vice President Mike Pence on June 7 in Des Moines, Iowa.

    Considering the first town hall didn’t help CNN’s rep and that Pence hasn’t actually officially announced his 2024 presidential candidacy (or criticized Trump for allegedly expressing approval of rioters chanting “Hang Mike Pence” on Jan. 6, 2021, at the U.S. Capitol), many Twitter users decided the only reasonable response was mockery. Pure and simple brutal mockery.

    One person wondered if the fly that appeared on Pence’s head during the 2020 vice presidential debate would be there for an encore.

    And the snark continued…

    After Bash said she was “looking forward” to the event, she also got the Twitter treatment from critics, including one who called her a “paid-shill who works for a right wing network that prioritizes ratings and profits over the preservation of our Democracy.”

    But one person decided to support the CNN town hall: Former Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), who praised Pence for not being “afraid to do events on networks that are not in lock step with his ideology.”

    According to RealClearPolitics, Pence is only polling 4.7% among Republicans, with the caveat being that he actually hasn’t declared his candidacy, something that could change before the June 7 town hall.

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  • What would a Trump, Pence 2024 primary matchup look like?

    What would a Trump, Pence 2024 primary matchup look like?

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    What would a Trump, Pence 2024 primary matchup look like? – CBS News


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    A new super PAC has now formed to support a potential Pence 2024 campaign. CBS News political director Fin Gómez and CBS News political reporter Aaron Navarro join to discuss where the former vice president would fit in a crowded presidential primary field.

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  • Pro-Pence super PAC launches with former aides of GOP governors who have rebuked Trump

    Pro-Pence super PAC launches with former aides of GOP governors who have rebuked Trump

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    A new super PAC has formed to support a presidential run by former Vice President Mike Pence, according to sources familiar with its planning. The group’s formation is another sign that Pence, who has not yet officially declared a 2024 bid, is gearing up to jump into the race.

    The PAC supporting Pence, “Committed to America,” is filled with former aides to Governors Brian Kemp of Georgia and Larry Hogan, the former governor of Maryland. Like Pence, who refused to reject President Joe Biden’s electoral college victory on Jan. 6, 2021, both governors are Republicans who have clashed with former President Donald Trump in recent years.

    Bobby Saparow, who led Kemp’s 2022 reelection campaign, including his decisive primary victory over Trump-backed former Sen. David Perdue, will be the executive director of the PAC. Co-chairs of the PAC include Scott Reed, the campaign manager of Senator Bob Dole’s 1996 presidential bid, and former Rep. Jeb Hensarling. 

    Mike Ricci, who served as Hogan’s communications director in the governor’s office as well as a spokesperson for House speakers Paul Ryan and John Boehner, is handling press for the group. 

    Whether Hogan or Kemp will back a potential Pence presidential bid is not yet clear. Hogan recently announced he would not run for president. The former Maryland governor, who worked with Pence throughout the pandemic response, met with Pence in Iowa in March. In the 2016 GOP primary, Hogan endorsed former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, who is also considering a 2024 run. 

    Super PACs for presidential bids have historically been used to buy campaign ads to support their preferred candidate, fund get-out-the-vote drives and conduct research on policy and other candidates. 

    But “Committed to America,” as well as the “Never Back Down” super PAC supporting a 2024 run for Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, are both trying to expand the extent to which these groups, which can receive an unlimited amount of donations, can support a candidate on the ground.

    “We’re going to organize Iowa, all 99 counties, like we’re running him for county sheriff,” Reed said. 

    Although Pence has been visiting a number of early-voting states, his potential road to the GOP nomination, and the White House, has not been evident in early national presidential primary polls. A CBS News national poll conducted in late April of the expected 2024 GOP presidential field showed Pence with just 5% support among likely GOP primary voters, and when asked if they’d consider voting for Pence, 57% said they were not considering it while 17% said they were considering it.

    The staffers behind the PAC believe that Pence’s experience as an Indiana governor and congressman, as well as his experience as vice president after the 2020 election, will establish him as the “committed constitutional conservative” in the field. 

    “People know Mike Pence, they just don’t know him well,” Reed said. “This campaign is going to reintroduce Mike Pence to the country as his own man, not as vice president, but as a true economic, social, and national security conservative — a Reagan conservative.”

    The PAC plans to mirror the grassroots operation used to help Kemp to a reelection landslide in Georgia over his Trump-backed opponent and deploy it on a national level.

    “You will see that what we built out with Governor Kemp is going to be taken to the national stage, ” Saparow said. “We have all the confidence in the world that the results that we are able to garner for Governor Kemp, we can duplicate for the vice president.” 

    In late April, Pence told CBS News during a trip to Iowa that he’d announce his 2024 decision “well before late June” and that anyone “serious” about seeking the GOP nomination has to be in by June. 

    Pence will be in New Hampshire, the first state to hold a GOP 2024 presidential primary for two days of events this week.

    Robert Costa contributed reporting. 

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  • That Sound You Hear Is Donald Trump Popping a Blood Vessel Over Mike Pence’s Jan. 6 Grand Jury Testimony

    That Sound You Hear Is Donald Trump Popping a Blood Vessel Over Mike Pence’s Jan. 6 Grand Jury Testimony

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    As you’ve probably heard by now, Donald Trump is in a whole lot of legal peril. For starters, he’s currently on trial for rape, having been accused by writer E. Jean Carroll of attacking her in a New York department store in the mid-’90s. Then there are the 34 class E felonies he was charged with by the Manhattan district attorney’s office last month, stemming from various hush money payments he allegedly made in the lead up to the 2016 election. But of course, that’s not all. The ex-president is also under investigation by the Fulton County district attorney’s office for trying to overturn the 2020 election in Georgia; he’s been sued by the New York attorney general’s office on allegations of massive fraud; and a special counsel appointed by the Justice Department is running a pair of criminal probes into both his handling of classified documents (and possible obstruction) and plot to stay in power following his loss to Joe Biden (plus the insurrection that followed). And the former guy is unlikely to be thrilled about the latest development in the DOJ’s election investigation.

    CNN reports that special counsel Jack Smith “sat in on the federal grand jury proceeding while former vice president Mike Pence testified for more than five hours last week,” according to a trio of people familiar with the matter. As the outlet notes, the former VP’s testimony is “likely to elicit a strong negative reaction” from Trump—and not just because Trump is prone to massive outbursts over the smallest of perceived slights.

    As a reminder, the ex-president has expended significant time and energy trying to block Pence from testifying about January 6 and the weeks leading up to the attack on the US Capitol; last month, his attorneys reportedly tried (and failed) to reverse a judge’s order for Pence to appear before a federal grand jury. (For his part, Pence spent the two-plus years since January 6, 2021, refusing to tell investigators what he knew about the insurrection and the days that preceded it, and then, in April, his adviser announced that he would not appeal the latest ruling ordering him to comply with the special counsel subpoena for testimony.) Trump’s desire to block Pence from speaking likely has something to do with the former VP’s unique insights into his attempt to stay in power and the lengths he went to steal a second term. Those insights include but are not limited to: the fact that Trump reportedly spent weeks pressuring Pence to overturn the 2020 election, even after being told it was illegal; told Pence, “You can be a patriot or you can be a pussy”; told Pence, in the days before January 6, that hundreds of thousands of people were going to hate him for being “too honest” to overturn the results of the election; and inspired his supporters to go after Pence by telling them at the “Stop the Steal” rally that the then VP had the power to block Joe Biden’s win, which resulted in chants of “Hang Mike Pence” and a situation wherein the Secret Service had to move Pence and his family to a secure location, lest the rioters make good on their threats.

    After Pence said in March that his old boss was “wrong” to demand he overturn the results of the election and—in his most strongly worded remarks to do date—declared that “history will hold Donald Trump accountable,” Trump flew off the handle and blamed Pence for January 6, saying: “Had [Pence] sent the votes back to the legislatures, they wouldn’t have had a problem with Jan. 6, so in many ways, you can blame him for Jan. 6. Had he sent them back to Pennsylvania, Georgia, Arizona, the states, I believe, number one, you would have had a different outcome. But I also believe you wouldn’t have had ‘Jan. 6’ as we call it.”

    It was a claim so divorced from reality that even the gang at Fox News couldn’t believe it.

    Twitter content

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    So, yeah, Pence (and Smith) can probably expect that a “strong negative reaction” is forthcoming.

    Every single point here is true (and yet)

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  • Mike Pence Has Finally Testified to the Grand Jury Investigating Trump’s Attempts to Overturn the 2020 Election

    Mike Pence Has Finally Testified to the Grand Jury Investigating Trump’s Attempts to Overturn the 2020 Election

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    Donald Trump tried to stop Mike Pence from testifying. Pence himself tried to avoid taking the stand. But a federal appeals court had the last word, and on Thursday the former vice president finally appeared before a grand jury investigating his old boss’s attempts to overthrow the 2020 election. It’s unclear exactly what Pence said in his testimony. But the ex-veep — and potential challenger to Trump for the 2024 GOP nomination — suggested in a CBS News interview last week that his testimony would be similar to what he recounted in his 2022 book on the matter. “We’ll tell the truth,” he told the outlet. “The story that I’ve been telling the American people all across the country, the story that I wrote in the pages of my memoir…that will be what I tell in that setting, as well.”

    Pence’s promise to “tell the truth” is probably bad news for Trump. In addition to his position as Trump’s ticket-mate in the failed reelection bid, the former vice president was the subject of a pressure campaign by the former president and his allies to undermine Joe Biden’s victory and he was at the Capitol to certify the 2020 results when a MAGA mob overran the building. 

    “They had come to protest the result of the election and to prevent Congress from fulfilling its responsibility to open and count the Electoral College votes,” as Pence wrote in his 2022 book on the matter. “And, as I later learned, many had come looking for me.”

    Pence’s recounting of the lead-up to the insurrection and its aftermath could pose a significant legal threat to the former president. Trump, who is already facing nearly three dozen felony charges in New York relating to hush-money payments he allegedly oversaw during the 2016 campaign, has insisted he is the victim of a wide-ranging political witch hunt. He’s vowed to remain in the 2024 race despite his indictment in New York, potential election meddling charges in Georgia, and investigations by special counsel Jack Smith into his efforts to subvert democracy in 2020 and his handling of classified documents after leaving office — both of which could also lead to indictments. So far, the legal peril — both on the criminal front and in civil court, where he is also facing rape accusations from writer E. Jean Carroll — has seemed to help him in the polls, rather than hurt him, with Republicans, who have mostly rallied around him as he steals oxygen from the rest of the GOP field. But there could come a point where his campaign finally starts to sink under the weight of his legal challenges, which could potentially come with jail time. 

    Trump, by many accounts, is deeply concerned about the prospect of ending up in prison — and, in fact, launched his reelection campaign partly because he seems to think it will keep that possibility from coming to pass. But he has been unable to stop himself from attacking Smith, his investigator. “He’s a Trump hater,” the former president said in a bizarre video Thursday, claiming that the special counsel was attempting to “obstruct and interfere with the 2020 election.” “His wife’s a Trump hater. His family is a Trump hater. They all hate Trump. They hate him with a passion. They’ll do anything they can to hurt Trump.”

    “He’s a harasser and abuser,” Trump said, “of our people.”

    His “people,” of course, include January 6 insurrectionists, one of whom he praised at a New Hampshire campaign stop Thursday. “You’ve been through too much,” he told Micki Larson-Olson, who was convicted on misdemeanor charges relating to the Capitol attack. “I think it’s so terrible,” he said of the prosecution of the insurrectionists — some of whom had stalked the halls of Congress chanting “Hang Mike Pence!” Asked by a reporter during that New Hampshire swing about Pence’s testimony Thursday, Trump responded vaguely: “I don’t know what he said,” he told the reporter, “but, uh, I have a lot of confidence in him.”

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    Eric Lutz

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  • ‘It Will Shock You’: Mehdi Hasan Exposes Mike Pence As GOP’s Most Extreme 2024 Contender

    ‘It Will Shock You’: Mehdi Hasan Exposes Mike Pence As GOP’s Most Extreme 2024 Contender

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    MSNBC’s Mehdi Hasan on Thursday urged people not to be “deceived” by Mike Pence ahead of the former vice president’s potential 2024 campaign.

    “This aw shucks, mild-mannered, soft-spoken, moderate-sounding family man has a political record that may be more extreme and out there” than any other GOP candidate, he said.

    Hasan laid bare Pence’s extremist viewpoints on issues from abortion to climate change, warning viewers that Pence’s rhetoric “will shock you.”

    Watch the full video here:

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  • Pence testifies before grand jury in 2020 election probe

    Pence testifies before grand jury in 2020 election probe

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    Pence testifies before grand jury in 2020 election probe – CBS News


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    CBS News has learned that former Vice President Mike Pence testified for more than seven hours Thursday before a grand jury in the special counsel investigation into former President Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 election. Robert Costa reports.

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