Archive for the ‘Mike Pence’ Category

Mike Pence: What you need to know about the Republican nominee for vice president – ABC News

Vice President Mike Pence represents a more traditional style of the Republican Party compared to President Donald Trump but has been a loyal second-in-command throughout their first term in office. Pence has been at the forefront, sometimes leading, major policy efforts of the Trump administration, such as the White House's response to the coronavirus pandemic.

The pair did not personally know one another prior to their 2016 race, but their first term has strengthened their bond. Pence has been steadfast in his support for the president through controversy, whether it was a ban on travel into the U.S. from predominantly Muslim countries, Trump's impeachment by the House of Representatives and trial in the Senate, or the decision to resume large, in-person campaign events amid coronavirus.

President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump stand with Mike Pence and his wife Karen Pence during the Republican National Convention at Fort McHenry National Monument on Aug. 26, 2020, in Baltimore.

Name: Michael Richard Pence

Party: Republican

Date of birth: June 7, 1959

Age: 61

Hometown: Columbus, Indiana

Family: Married to Karen Pence, father to Michael, Charlotte and Audrey

Education: Hanover College and the Indiana University McKinney School of Law

What he does now: Serves as the 48th vice president of the United States

Key life/career moments:

"A Christian, a conservative and a Republican, in that order," is how Mike Pence, who grew up Catholic, has often defined himself. After unsuccessful runs for Congress in 1988 and 1990, he became a conservative radio host from 1994 to 1999.

Pence was elected to the House of Representatives in 2000, where he served until 2013 representing the 2nd and 6th Congressional Districts. He then won the race for governor of Indiana, getting sworn in at the start of 2013.

On Feb. 26, 2020, Trump announced that Pence would lead the federal government's response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the biggest crisis Pence had managed in his political career.

But the pandemic wasn't the first public health crisis Pence oversaw, he was also governor of Indiana at the time of an HIV outbreak in Scott County that mostly affected intravenous drug users who were sharing needles. When Pence was a member of Congress in 2011, he voted to cut Planned Parenthood funding, which ultimately led to the only clinic in that county that had an HIV testing center to close.

After initially opposing needle exchange programs, Pence issued an executive order on March 26 authorizing a short-term program, but that came months after officials had warned of the increase in cases. Pence has defended his response, saying the state "immediately deployed health resources."

Where he stands on some of the issues:

COVID-19: Pence held numerous White House Coronavirus Task Force briefings at the early height of the pandemic and oversaw the deployment of personal protective equipment and ventilators to states facing an overwhelming number of patients in March.

But Pence repeatedly downplayed the severity of the coronavirus, both with his actions and public statements. On April 23, Pence said the pandemic would largely be behind the nation by Memorial Day, and in April, Pence disregarded Mayo Clinic policy and did not wear a mask while visiting patients in Minnesota, even after his office was informed about the policy.

He also published an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal on June 16 declaring there was no coronavirus "second wave" and blamed the media for "sounding alarm bells" over spikes in infections across the country. Over the summer, amid rises in cases across the Sunbelt, Pence traveled to several states for COVID-19 briefings on the ground, including some of the hardest hit like Arizona, Florida and Texas.

Vice President Mike Pence is joined onstage by President Donald Trump after delivering his acceptance speech during an event of the 2020 Republican National Convention held at Fort McHenry in Baltimore, Aug. 26, 2020. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

In the middle of the pandemic, the Trump campaign resumed large in-person rallies and Pence defended the move on June 26, saying "the right to peacefully assemble is enshrined in the constitution of the United States and we have an election coming up this fall." His answer was in stark contrast to advice being sent to states across the country that were recommending a limit on in-person gatherings, the use of face masks, and to socially distance.

The vice president has held firm in his belief that the Trump administration's response to the pandemic "is a response the American people can be proud of."

Racial justice: In a September interview with ABC News Live Anchor Linsey Davis, Pence said that he and Trump "reject" the notion that there's an implicit bias towards minorities in law enforcement. He also dismissed calls to "defund the police."

As protests erupted across America in the wake of the 2020 deaths of George Floyd and other Black people at the hands of police, Pence pushed the Trump campaign message of "law and order" and remained a vigorous defender of law enforcement.

While expressing his and Trump's steadfast support for police during campaign events, Pence has also expressed that "justice will be served" in Floyd's death and that he supports "the right of Americans to peaceful protest," but that "those who engage" in "rioting and looting" will be "held to the fullest account of the law."

"We will always stand with those who stand on the thin blue line," Pence has voiced repeatedly.

Abortion: For decades Pence has been a committed advocate against abortion, and on Jan. 27, 2017, a week after being sworn-in as vice president, Pence became the highest ranking White House official to speak in-person at the annual March for Life demonstration in Washington, D.C., a moment he has said he was "deeply humbled" by. Trump would later address the March for Life in person in 2020.

During his time in Congress, Pence helped lead efforts to defund Planned Parenthood, even threatening to support a plan to shut down the government in 2011 if the organization was not defunded. As governor, Pence signed every anti-abortion bill that crossed his desk, including a wide-ranging, controversial bill that, in part, banned abortions sought after the diagnosis of genetic abnormalities. A federal court in 2018 ruled that legislation to be unconstitutional.

Climate Change: When he ran for Congress in 2020, Pence's campaign website called global warming a "myth," but in 2016 his position evolved and he said "there's no question" humans have impacted climate change.

Pence is an advocate for the fossil fuel industry. Pence touts the economic sectors of oil, gas, fracking and coal as areas that boost job creation and the overall economy. He also hailed Trump for removing the U.S. from the Paris Climate Accord, which he has called a "bad deal since the moment it was signed" by the Obama administration.

Gun Rights: The vice president also heavily defends the Second Amendment. Speaking at the annual meeting of the National Rifle Association in 2019, Pence said that "under this president, and this vice president, no one is taking your guns."

Immigration: Pence has supported Trump's approach to immigration, including policies that include a ban on travel into the U.S. from predominantly Muslim countries, which was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court. He also defended the administration's "zero-tolerance" policy, which led to thousands of children being separated from their parents after crossing the Mexican border, and Trump's goal to build a wall on the southern border.

LGBTQ Rights: In 2015, then-Governor Pence signed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which permitted business in the state to use religion as a defense in court, but critics argued the law would allow businesses to discriminate against the LGBTQ community. Pence initially said he stood by the law, and in an interview that same year with ABC News Chief Anchor George Stephanopoulos, Pence dodged a question six times after Stephanopoulos asked if it would discriminate against gay couples. Pence eventually called for a revised bill with language that protected the LGBTQ community.

Fundraising:

Trumps reelection campaign, the Republican National Committee, and their two joint fundraising vehicles have touted a prolific fundraising prowess throughout the 2020 election cycle, together amassing a whopping $1.3 billion just from January 2019 through the end of August this year. They have already surpassed the $1 billion goal they had set for the election cycle,

Much of that fundraising advantage has disappeared in recent months, however, as Team Trump burned through more than $800 million of that through the end of July and was outraised by the Biden campaign and the Democrats by more than $150 million during the month of August. Last month, Trump brought in just $210 million compared to Bidens $364 million record fundraising.

Vice President Mike Pence speaks during the third night of the Republican National Convention at Fort McHenry National Monument in Baltimore, Aug. 26, 2020.

Neither of the campaigns have released their cash-on-hand by the end of August yet, but this potentially puts Trumps war chest lighter than Biden's as they enter the last two months of the election cycle, as the two campaigns had roughly the same amount of cash on-hand going into August.

What you might not know about him:

Pence got his start in politics as a Democrat. He was the youth Democratic Party coordinator of Bartholomew County in Indiana in 1975, voted for President Jimmy Carter in his failed re-election bid in 1980 and grew up idolizing former President John F. Kennedy.

He was named after his grandfather, Richard Michael Cawley, who was born in Ireland and immigrated to the U.S. through Ellis Island.

In the 1990s, Pence was a conservative talk radio host after his back-to-back failed races for Congress. "The Mike Pence Show" gave him a chance to speak about local and national politics.

ABC News' Soorin Kim contributed to this report.

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Mike Pence: What you need to know about the Republican nominee for vice president - ABC News

Mike Pence and debate fly are now a bobblehead figure – MLive.com

You can own a piece of viral history with a bobblehead figure of Vice President Mike Pence and the fly that created buzz during the vice-presidential debate last week.

The bobblehead by the Wisconsin-based National Bobblehead Hall of Fame and Museum commemorates the viral moment from the 2020 Vice Presidential Debate between Pence and Senator Kamala Harris in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, Oct. 7, a company news release said. The fly spent a little over two minutes on Pences hair during the debate - setting the internet abuzz.

RELATED: Vice President Mike Pence to visit Grand Rapids Wednesday

When we received several requests for a bobblehead with Pence and the fly, we knew we had to get to work, co-founder and CEO of the hall of fame and museum Phil Sklar said in the release.

On a base bearing his name, the Mike Pence Fly Bobblehead features Pence behind a podium in his debate-night suit with the fly on his head, a plexiglass-like barrier and a removable mini fly swatter. Orders are expected to ship in January 2021. Preorder here for $25, plus shipping.

This is the second bobblehead featuring Pence that the Hall of Fame and Museum has recently released. Bobbleheads featuring Pence and Harris were added to the 2020 Presidential Candidate Bobblehead series and are expected to ship in November. Bobbleheads featuring President Donald Trump and presidential candidate Joe Biden are also available in both the traditional series and a special caricature series.

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Mike Pence and debate fly are now a bobblehead figure - MLive.com

Mike Pence proves he’s the great GOP hope for 2024 – New York Post

Wednesday nights kickoff episode of the Mike and Mala show wasnt just the soon-to-be-forgotten sole vice presidential debate of 2020. No, it was something far more important: the first exhibition game of Campaign 2024.

Whether Donald Trump wins or loses on Nov. 3, Pence is in a stronger position than anybody to be the GOPs next batter up. Hes got name recognition, all the experience you could ask for, and hes battle-tested. He might be the only figure who can unite the Normies and the Trumpies both the boring, staid suburbanites in khakis who vote GOP because they like normal stuff like low taxes, light regulation and cultural conservatism; and the in-your-face guys who ride Harleys with MAGA flags flying and love Trump mainly because he owns the libs and makes fun of Jim Acosta.

As for Kamala Harris, I dont know what the actuarial tables say but when I ask my Magic 8 Ball whether she will become president by 2024, it comes back with Signs point to yes. Even if Hidin Joe Biden somehow makes it to 2024 intact, hell be too tired to run for a second term. Hell, these days hes too tired to make it to lunch: He typically calls a lid on the day at 9 a.m., and presumably spends the morning getting EKGs. So Harris-Pence isnt just the undercard for 2020, its how the 2024 race is shaping up to be.

And both sides are eager to make that happen. Harris, who was such a political superstar back in the forgotten era known as 2019 that when she dropped out of the race in December, 97 percent of Democrats wanted someone other than her to be the party nominee, is today the toast of DonkeyTown. Shes historic! She checks so many of the identity-politics boxes that Dems mistake for qualifications that the party has to pretend shes a talented politician, when anyone who watched the Democratic debates just last year knows shes one of those looks-better-on-paper candidates.

As for Pence, he was such a marvelous debater on Wednesday, when he properly ignored all questions and instead calmly disassembled Harris like a biology student dissecting a frog, that he reminded everyone he used to argue with people for a living, back when he was a talk-radio guy. What might a GOP be like that was led by someone who could thoroughly, rationally articulate all of the partys positions without rage-tweeting or getting his facts jumbled?

Pence is the answer. And unlike Mitt Romney, he doesnt carry the baggage of seeming like the consultant who just recommended your boss fire you. When Harris tried to paint Pence as an extremist on abortion, he turned the issue around completely as he placidly explained that Harris is the real extremist because she supports taxpayer funding for abortion up till the moment of birth. Harris shook her head when Pence said this but she didnt rebut the charge because its true. Its the kind of thing shed be happy to say if she was speaking to the Democrats Hollywood donor class. When Pence pulled a Tulsi Gabbard on her and pointed out how, as San Francisco DA, she had enacted the exact opposite program of the Democratic Partys vision of justice, she didnt rebut him on that either, but retreated to a lame series of irrelevant points shed already made earlier. She wouldnt answer the question of whether she or Biden would pack the Supreme Court, instead mangling an anecdote about how Abe Lincoln supposedly declined to nominate a Supreme Court justice in an election season. (He didnt make the nomination because the Senate was out of session at the time.)

Harris habit of smiling sarcastically and smirking in disbelief as Pence was ripping her to pieces may have excited the yass-queen bloggers, but it played horribly on TV. If Biden gets elected president, itll be because most of the voters think hes a harmless old dude who wont shake things up too much. Should his running mate become president before 2024, her far-left program, combined with her inability to do anything but grin when challenged on it, will make her very unpopular very quickly. Mike Pence proved this week hes got what it takes to make history by being the first candidate to beat an incumbent woman president.

Kyle Smith is critic-at-large for National Review.

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Mike Pence proves he's the great GOP hope for 2024 - New York Post

Jimmy Fallon Riffs on Mike Pences Fly and Pink Eye – The New York Times

At that point every American was like, Is that on him or on my TV.? JIMMY FALLON

And, hey, shouldnt he be in quarantine? I heard something like 35 of his co-workers have the virus. Although, Pence is probably safe because hes so boring his co-workers scatter whenever he comes in the room: Run, guys, Pence is coming! SETH MEYERS

And, hey, after all the trouble you went through, nobody will remember a damn thing that was said thanks to a fly landing on Mike Pence. And its a shame, because before that happened, Pence was making some very terrible points. SETH MEYERS

And look, flies land on people all the time. Theres nothing crazy about that. What was crazy is how long it sat there for. Even Trump was watching at home like, Wow, two minutes with Mike Pence. I could never do that. TREVOR NOAH

OK, can I just say that I was not surprised at all to see that fly on Mike Pence. First of all, even a fly knows better than to land on a Black womans hair. TREVOR NOAH

This is what happens when you go 18 years without blinking. JAMES CORDEN

Mike Pence doesnt even look live when hes live. Dude is an in-person Zoom meeting. Whenever he started speaking, I started looking for the gallery view button. SETH MEYERS

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Jimmy Fallon Riffs on Mike Pences Fly and Pink Eye - The New York Times

A Fly Landed on Mike Pence – The New York Times

This presumption that you hear consistently from Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, that America is systemically racist, and that, as Joe Biden said, that he believes that law enforcement has an implicit bias against minorities, is a great insult to the men and women who serve in law enforcement. And I want everyone to know who puts on the uniform of law enforcement every day, that President Trump and I stand with you. And it is remarkable that when Senator Tim Scott tried to pass a police reform bill, brought together a group of Republicans and Democrats, Senator Harris, you got up and walked out of the room. And then you filibustered Senator Tim Scotts bill on the Senate floor that would have provided new accountability, new resources. Look, we dont have to choose between supporting law enforcement, improving public safety and supporting our African-American neighbors Thank you, Vice President and all of our minorities. Under President Trumps leadership Thank you, Vice President Pence well always stand with law enforcement and well do what weve done from Day 1 Vice President Pence, thank you, your time is up. is improve the lives of African-Americans.

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A Fly Landed on Mike Pence - The New York Times