Archive for the ‘Mike Pence’ Category

Spicer ‘would proudly play any role’ if Mike Pence runs for president in 2024 – News & Observer


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Spicer 'would proudly play any role' if Mike Pence runs for president in 2024
News & Observer
Pence the former governor of Indiana and a staunch social conservative has proven to be an important figure in the Senate, already casting a tie-breaking vote four times in just sixth months, according to CNN. That would put him on pace to have ...
Sean Spicer would 'proudly' work for Mike Pence if he runs for presidentWashington Examiner

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Spicer 'would proudly play any role' if Mike Pence runs for president in 2024 - News & Observer

Vice President Mike Pence: Russian ‘Aggression’ Makes NATO Necessary – NBCNews.com

Vice President Mike Pence speaks during a joint news conference with Estonia's President Kersti Kaljulaid, Lithuania's President Dalia Grybauskaite and Latvia's President Raimonds Vejonis in Tallinn, Estonia, on Monday. Ints Kalnins / Reuters

President Trump had previously

No other president since NATO was founded in 1949 had questioned that principle until Trump, although he recently expressed support for NATO's Article 5.

Pence also stated that recent diplomatic action by Russia will not impact American commitments to the security of its NATO allies.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said Sunday that he was

The move came in the wake of new sanctions voted through by the U.S. Congress last week which aim to punish Moscow for interfering in the 2016 presidential election and for its military aggression in Ukraine and Syria.

Recent diplomatic action taken by Moscow will not deter the commitment of the United States of America to our security, the security of our allies and the security of freedom loving nations around the world, Pence said.

[The U.S.] stands firmly behind our Article 5 pledge of mutual defense and an attack on one of us is an attack on us all, he added.

Estonian president, Kersti Kaljulaid, said the presence of Pence in Tallinn underlined the credibility of Article 5.

President Dalia Grybauskait of Lithuania, meanwhile, praised the decision of the U.S. Congress to pass new sanctions against Russia, describing it as a very good message.

Eoghan Macguire reported from London.

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Vice President Mike Pence: Russian 'Aggression' Makes NATO Necessary - NBCNews.com

Sean Spicer says he would play role in Mike Pence’s administration in 2024 – New York Daily News

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Monday, July 31, 2017, 12:49 PM

It appears Sean Spicer is already looking ahead to the next administration.

The catch is, he means the next Republican commander-in-chief, after a hypothetical eight years under Donald Trump.

Spicer took to Twitter late Sunday to answer Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) opinionated message about an imminent Trump impeachment.

Her tweet, from July 29, reads: Mike Pence is somewhere planning an inauguration. Priebus and Spicer will lead the transition.

President Trump had a really, really terrible July

In response, the former press secretary, who resigned this month due to reported disagreements over the hiring of Anthony Scaramucci, tweeted, When and if (Mike Pence) runs in 2024 I would proudly play any role he asks. Good to know you have already conceded that.

Spicer will remain a part of the Trump administration until mid-August, as he is overseeing the transition with Scaramucci, whos been the talk of the nation over the course of the last week.

Scaramucci went on a profanity-laced tirade against former Chief of Staff Reince Priebus and informed the public that he planned on firing multiple people in the communications department.

The embattled White House is seeing high turnover rates across many crucial positions. Priebus was replaced by Gen. John F. Kelly as chief of staff, despite the fact that he helped orchestrate the political upset at the polls last November as a part of the Republican National Committee.

John Kelly sworn in as Trumps second White House chief of staff

All of this comes as Trump has repeatedly called out Attorney General Jeff Sessions over his handling of the Russia investigation.

Trump, who appears to be in favor of a replacement, said that if he would have known Sessions would recuse himself, he wouldve never hired him.

Whats more, other top advisers to the President remain jockeying for power. This includes Trumps son-in-law Jared Kushner, whos taken heat in previous weeks regarding the Russia investigation, chief strategist Steve Bannon, counselor to the president Kellyanne Conway, and others.

Donald Trump, Jr., who remained at his fathers side during the 2016 campaign and has been a strong vocal proponent of the administration, also found himself in hot water over his handling of correspondence in the Russian meddling case.

Despite these indicators, Trump took to Twitter Monday morning to ensure his constituents that the White House is not chaotic.

Highest Stock Market EVER, best economic numbers in years, unemployment lowest in 17 years, wages raising, border secure, S.C.: No WH chaos! the President tweeted.

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Sean Spicer says he would play role in Mike Pence's administration in 2024 - New York Daily News

The vice-tweeter, &c. – National Review

Every once in a while, I see a tweet from Vice President Pence, and this happened last week. The veep tweeted, Thanks to the leadership of @POTUS Donald Trump, welcome to a historic day for American jobs in the American heartland.

This struck me as a little Soviet in nature. Thanks to the Leader, grain harvest is up in the Oryol Oblast by 30 percent! The workers have never been happier.

A glance at the veeps Twitter profile lets you know that most of his tweets are like this, or many of them are. They are deferential to President Trump, and glowing about him.

Heres another one: Looking forward to chatting with @TuckerCarlson about @POTUS wins these first six months in office.

Wins, of course, is Trump language: tired of winning and all that.

Loyalty in a vice president, or in any other person, is a good thing. But I often sense that Mike Pence is trying too hard, or too obviously, or too awkwardly. Is that because Trump excites a certain amount of fear?

Nancy Reagan used to be mocked for The Gaze the adoring look she gave her husband, often during his speeches. Pence has a gaze, too.

I recall that Vice President Bush used to be mocked for his loyalty to Reagan. His habitual response was, In my family, loyalty is not a character flaw. During the 84 campaign in which Reagan and Bush were running for reelection the veep said, Im for Mr. Reagan, blindly. I believe he was mocking his mockers. Im not entirely sure.

Anyway

Mike Pence is mocked for referring to his wife as Mother. Well, once upon a time at least in the Midwest, I can tell you it was perfectly normal for husbands and wives, who were parents, to call each other Mother and Father.

In fact, Reagan was mocked for calling his wife Mommy. Often, if you wanted to imitate him, you said, Well, Mommy

Speaking of vice presidents: Bob Dole was a near vice president, running with President Ford in 1976. He was 53 at the time. Why am I getting into age? Because Dole turned 94 the other day.

I was a Dole intern in the Reagan-Bush reelection year, 1984.

Arguably, Dole was the most important politician of the second half of the 20th century who did not become president along with Hubert Humphrey. Dole was a vice-presidential nominee, a presidential nominee, Senate majority leader, etc.

Trump has been firing staff. I thought of a saying in sports: You cant fire the team, so you fire the coach. The opposite is true at the White House.

What if the coach is the problem? Well, voters will have to figure that out.

When it comes to Anthony Scaramucci and his blue streak, the presidents spokeswomen are speaking the same language. Conway: I think hes passionate about the president. It sometimes gets the best of him. Sanders: Sometimes hes a passionate guy. Sometimes he might let that passion get the better of him.

Nicely coordinated. But in my view, there is all too much passion about this president. It is not exactly American. I think of Argentina and the Pern cult.

And how about La Pasionaria? She was a Communist in Spain.

Donald Trump is a celebrity. I mean, he was a celebrity before he ran for president. Yet the GOP is not famous for celebrities. Let me count my favorites: Cheryl Ladd, Bruce Willis, and Shannen Doherty.

Kid Rock is a celebrity: a rapper-rocker in Michigan. He is also a Republican. And hes talking about running for the U.S. Senate. I would not bet against his being nominated. GOP voters are in that kind of mood.

Nearby in Minnesota, Jesse Ventura was governor. Before that, he was in the World Wrestling Federation.

And the Trump phenomenon has opened up new vistas. Some people want Dwayne The Rock Johnson to run for president.

Think of it: The Rock in the White House and Kid Rock in the Senate. Rock on, America.

P.S. I have a cousin who once worked on a movie with The Rock. Said he was a total peach loved and respected by all.

In Australia, police have foiled a plot to bring down an airliner. (Story here.) Good, really good. Yet I think of that old expression that terrorist expression: You have to be lucky all the time. We have to be lucky only once.

Okay, then, may our luck hold

Mandy Patinkin, the actor, was to take part in a play. But when this was announced, there was a firestorm. Why? Because he is white; and the actor he was set to replace, Okieriete Onaodowan, is black. Is the character black? I dont think so. It was played in the past by Josh Groban, who is white.

Anyway, these racial scorecards are confusing to me. Because of the firestorm, Patinkin pulled out of the show. So the show is closing.

To read a news article, go here.

Last year, I wrote an essay called Killing Aida: A mortal threat to art. You can have identity politics or you can have art. One or the other. You cant have both. One or the other has to go.

What a lousy pass.

On to something lighter. Did you see Franois Ruffin, in the French Assembly, with his shirt sloppily tucked? Oh, its great, just great. Go here.

A few weeks ago, wasnt Speaker Paul Ryan under fire for some dress-code issue?

Lets do a little language. I will ignore the Mooch for a bit. Lets do something cleaner: Congressman Buddy Carter (R., Ga.), who said, Somebody needs to go over there to that Senate and snatch a knot in their a**. I consider myself a connoisseur of the American vernacular, and even an exemplar of it (!). But I must confess, thats a new one on me

A man wrote on Twitter, Thank you, @NewYorker, for finally answering the vexing question of how to spell the shorthand for casual. It transpired that The New Yorker had caj. I do not spell it that way. If I saw caj, I would pronounce it like cadge a cigarette. For the first syllable of casual, I write cazh.

Nothing is entirely satisfying

Shall we have a name? Caeleb. Not Caleb, but Caeleb as in Caeleb Dressel, who I guess is the best swimmer in the world. You can read about him here.

And if you can swim faster than anyone else you can spell your name however you want. (Even us slow swimmers can, true.)

Have you been to Galilee? The fishing village in Rhode Island? I have. Neat place. Across the harbor is Jerusalem. Jerusalem, R.I.

In Galilee, there is a bed and breakfast (it appears). Its called The Galilean. Beautiful name. As you leave the village, a sign says, Catch you soon! (Fishing village, get it?)

In this state, highway repairs and the like are designated Rhode works. (Get it?)

Lets have an obit not from me, but from the New York Times, here. I will quote the first paragraph:

Roger D. Abrahams, one of the first folklorists to study the language and performance styles of black Americans as reflected in songs, proverbs and riddles both old and new, died on June 20 in Sunnyvale, Calif. He was 84.

It occurs to me that Professor Abrahams was lucky to have lived and worked when he did. Later on, he would have been accused of appropriation and other unpardonable crimes.

Do you know what I mean?

Its not every day not every Impromptus that I close with a T-shirt, but lets do it this time. A lady walked by with a shirt that said, Thats a horrible idea. And at the bottom: What time?

Have a great week, yall.

A word from the National Review Store: To get Digging In: Further Collected Writings of Jay Nordlinger, go here.

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The vice-tweeter, &c. - National Review

Mike Pence tells Eastern Europe: ‘We are with you’ – Washington Examiner

Vice President Mike Pence said he hopes his trip in Eastern Europe shows the Baltic States the United States stands with them.

"President Trump sent me to Europe with a very simple message. And that is that America first doesn't mean America alone," he said in an interview with Fox News during a stop in Tallinn, Estonia

"Our message to the Baltic states, my message when we visit Georgia and Montenegro, will be the same: To our allies here in Eastern Europe, we are with you, we stand with you on behalf of freedoms. It's a great honor to be with you," Pence added.

Pence and second lady Karen Pence arrived in in Eastern Europe on Sunday afternoon, part of a three-country visit to Estonia, Georgia, and Montenegro.

The vice president's visit comes amid tensions between NATO and Russia.

In a statement, Estonian Prime Minister Juri Ratas said cooperation between the U.S. and the Baltic States is "vital."

"The contribution of the US to the security of the Baltic States and also the whole of Europe is vital, and I certainly wish to thank the vice president for that. Besides that, we plan to speak about the Estonian digital solutions that are of interest to the US, and developing cooperation in cyber defense at our meeting. Another important topic that will be on the table, is the cooperation between the [European Union] and the US," Ratas said in a statement.

Pence tweeted early Sunday morning he had arrived and was ready to talk about "security and prosperity" with the Baltic States' leaders.

When asked if the Trump administration is "committed" to defending the Baltic States, Pence responded affirmatively.

"Well, the president has made it very clear that Russia's destabilizing activities, its support for rogue regimes, its activities in Ukraine, are unacceptable. The president made very clear that very soon he will sign the sanctions from the Congress of the United States to reinforce that. But at the same time, as we make our intentions clear, we expect Russian behavior to change," he said.

Trump is expected to soon sign legislation imposing new sanctions on Russia, which has caused President Vladimir Putin to retaliate and pull U.S. diplomats from Moscow.

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Mike Pence tells Eastern Europe: 'We are with you' - Washington Examiner