Pence, Tiptoeing Away From Trump, Lays Groundwork for 24 Run – The New York Times

AMES, Iowa For months, former Vice President Mike Pence has been edging away from his alliance of convenience with former President Donald J. Trump.

After four years of service bordering on subservience, the increasingly emboldened Mr. Pence is seeking to reintroduce himself to Republican voters ahead of a potential presidential bid by setting himself apart from what many in the G.O.P. see as the worst impulses of Mr. Trump. Hes among a small group in his party considering a run in 2024 no matter what Mr. Trump decides.

Mr. Pence first used high-profile speeches to criticize the former presidents push to overturn the 2020 election results, stating flatly that Mr. Trump was wrong in his assertion that Mr. Pence could have blocked the Electoral College ratification on Jan. 6, 2021. Mr. Pence then unsubtly visited the Charlottesville, Va., memorial to Heather Heyer, who was killed in the 2017 white supremacist riot there that Mr. Trump sought to rationalize by faulting both sides.

Now, on Monday outside Atlanta, Mr. Pence is taking his boldest and most unambiguous step toward confronting his former political patron. On the eve of Georgias primary, the former vice president will stump with Gov. Brian Kemp, perhaps the top target of Mr. Trumps 2022 vengeance campaign against Republicans who didnt bow to his election lies.

Mr. Pence grew close with Mr. Kemp during the pandemic and 2020 campaign, and now he is lining up against Mr. Trumps handpicked candidate, former Senator David Perdue. But more than that, Mr. Pence is seeking to claim a share of credit in whats expected to be the starkest repudiation yet of Mr. Trumps attempt to consolidate power, with Mr. Kemp widely expected to prevail.

It is an emphatic break between the onetime running mates, who have not spoken for nearly a year but have also not publicly waged a proxy war until now. Mr. Pence, his aides say, knows full well what going down to Georgia represents and the symbolism alone will stand without him targeting Mr. Trump or even Mr. Perdue in his remarks.

In a statement ahead of Mr. Pences visit to Georgia, Mr. Trump belittled his vice president through a spokesman.

Mike Pence was set to lose a governors race in 2016 before he was plucked up and his political career was salvaged, said Taylor Budowich, the spokesman. Now, desperate to chase his lost relevance, Pence is parachuting into races, hoping someone is paying attention. The reality is, President Trump is already 82-3 with his endorsements, and theres nothing stopping him from saving America in 2022 and beyond.

Georgia may represent only the beginning of a new rivalry.

In an interview before a speech last month in Iowa, Mr. Pence pointedly declined to rule out running even if Mr. Trump also enters the 2024 primary. Well go where were called, Mr. Pence said, explaining that he and his wife would act on prayer. Thats the way Karen and I have always approached these things.

Recalling the gratitude he gets from resisting Mr. Trumps demands that he block Congress from affirming President Bidens victory, he said: I have been very moved traveling around the country how much people have made a point to express appreciation, it has been very humbling to me.

Yet in the same interview, he recalled spending five years in the foxhole with Mr. Trump, noting that he was incredibly proud of the record, before giving a dinner speech trumpeting the Trump-Pence administration multiple times.

His approach amounts to the first soundings of a sort of Trump-without-the-chaos strategy, a bet that Republican primary voters crave the policy record of the last administration but without the impulsiveness, norm-breaking and naked demagogy.

There may yet be a constituency for such an appeal, as this years G.O.P. primaries demonstrate how Trumpism is flourishing no matter whom its architect blesses.

However, its far from clear that the sober-minded Mr. Pence is the best vessel for that message at a time many G.O.P. voters thrill more to closed-fist Trumpian pugnacity than paeans to the power of prayer.

As of now, Mr. Trump is the clear favorite. Yet all his hints about becoming the first former president in over a century to try to reclaim the office havent stopped a host of other potential aspirants.

Whether its Mr. Pence or former Trump cabinet members or a range of other elected officials, ambitious Republicans are already visiting early nominating states like Iowa and New Hampshire, courting influential lawmakers and cultivating relationships with donors.

Even if Mr. Trump runs, many Republicans believe there will still be a hotly contested race.

I dont think it ends the primary, said Gov. Chris Sununu of New Hampshire, who is mulling a presidential campaign. My sense is youre still going to have a very robust primary here just because everyone has to earn it.

So far, Republican contenders are voting with their feet.

Among those who have beaten a path to the early nominating states: Mr. Pence; former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo; the former United Nations ambassador Nikki Haley; and Senators Tom Cotton of Arkansas, Tim Scott of South Carolina and Rick Scott of Florida.

Should Mr. Trump run, he would most likely sideline some Republicans who would either find him difficult to beat or just as soon wait it out. A smaller group of contenders, however, may find the less crowded field more appealing.

Those ranks include former Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey, who was one of Mr. Trumps earliest and most prominent supporters in 2016, but who has broken with him since the 2020 election.

Given the problems the country is facing at home and abroad, if you only feel up for it if somebody else doesnt run, well, then you better not run, Mr. Christie said. Everybody who is considering running for president in 24 should have a moral obligation to make that decision regardless of who else runs.

As for his own plans, he said: Sure, Im thinking about it.

Mr. Trumps populist and pugilist imprint on the party has been cemented, whether he runs or not. Thats why Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida is being so closely watched by conservative voters, donors and activists.

Seizing on every chance to confront the left and the news media, and to draw coverage on right-wing media for both, Mr. DeSantis has risen to second place behind Mr. Trump in a series of way-too-early polls of Republican voters.

But hes steadfastly refused to visit Iowa and New Hampshire as a would-be White House candidate, leaving Florida mostly just to stockpile more money for his re-election. Thats not to say hes not keeping his eye on national politics he reached out to Gov. Kim Reynolds of Iowa to wish her well before her response to President Bidens State of the Union address this year.

Why are these midterms so important? This years races could tip the balance of power in Congress to Republicans, hobbling President Bidens agenda for the second half of his term. They will also test former President Donald J. Trumps role as a G.O.P. kingmaker. Heres what to know:

What are the midterm elections? Midterms take place two years after a presidential election, at the midpoint of a presidential term hence the name. This year, a lot of seats are up for grabs, including all 435 House seats, 35 of the 100 Senate seats and 36 of 50 governorships.

What do the midterms mean for Biden? With slim majorities in Congress, Democrats have struggled to pass Mr. Bidens agenda. Republican control of the House or Senate would make the presidents legislative goals a near-impossibility.

What are the races to watch? Only a handful of seats will determine if Democrats maintain control of the House over Republicans, and a single state could shift power in the 50-50 Senate. Here are 10 races to watch in the Houseand Senate, as well as several key governors contests.

When are the key races taking place? The primary gauntletis already underway. Closely watched racesin Pennsylvania, North Carolina and Georgia will be held in May, with more taking place through the summer. Primaries run until September before the general election on Nov. 8.

Go deeper. What is redistrictingand how does it affect the midterm elections? How does polling work? How do you register to vote? Weve got more answers to your pressing midterm questions here.

Mr. DeSantis, though, is hardly beloved among his fellow Republican governors, a group thats unlikely to rally around him in the same fashion they did George W. Bush, then the Texas governor, in 2000.

I know theres a lot of talk on Fox News and stuff like that on the national level or in Florida but theres really not talk about him here in New Hampshire, Mr. Sununu said of Mr. DeSantis.

What there is there, said the longtime Republican strategist Jim Merrill, is a quiet but persistent appetite among many in the rank-and-file to turn the page on Mr. Trump, at least as the partys nominee.

There is a desire to move on here and its not just among the John Kasich and Bill Weld crowd, said Mr. Merrill, alluding to two former Republican governors who ran as anti-Trump moderates in the states primary.

Yet if Mr. Trump faces a divided Republican field as he did in the first wave of caucuses and primaries in 2016, he could again claim the nomination with a plurality rather than a majority in many states because of his seemingly unshakable hold on a third of his partys electorate.

At a county G.O.P. dinner in Ames a college community thats more upscale, and decidedly less Trump oriented, than much of Iowa it was not difficult to find Republicans eager to find a fresh nominee, even if they edged into saying as much with Midwest Nice euphemisms.

Hes calm and predictable so thats a good thing, Eric Weber said of Mr. Pence.

Mr. Trump was too divisive even though what he did is great, Mr. Weber said as his wife, Carol, suggested another Trump bid may divide people.

Yet they werent ready to sign up with Mr. Pence, as both noted their affection for Mr. Cotton and Mr. DeSantis.

Mr. Pences speech was received well if not overwhelmingly so. It had all the bearings of a Republican in Iowa leaning toward a presidential bid knowing references to local politicians, Midwest totems like John Deere and attacks on the Democrats in power in Washington.

Yet it also had the distinct air of a pre-Trump brand of Republicanism, with only the slightest criticism of the news media (and that was even gloved with all due respect), references to becoming a grandfather and G-rated jokes that could have just as easily been delivered by Mitt Romney (it involved Washington, D.C., and hot air).

Few at the gathering liked Mr. Pence as much as Kevin and Linda Lauver.

Their phones blaring with tornado warnings, the Lauvers took shelter in the Ames Country Club basement ahead of the April G.O.P. dinner. And they bumped into the evenings keynote speaker.

We want somebody from the Midwest, Ms. Lauver told Mr. Pence, nudging him to run for president in 2024. I like Mike, Mr. Lauver chimed in.

Mr. Pence earnestly patted his heart and offered his thanks.

As Mr. Lauver headed back upstairs after the tornado false alarm, he wanted to be clear that he liked Mr. Trump.

He did what he said what he was going to do, said Mr. Lauver, before adding in Iowa deadpan: When he said the least it was the best.

Now, he continued, We need him to say, OK, Ill step aside. Then Mr. Lauver paused.

I dont know if hell do that.

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Pence, Tiptoeing Away From Trump, Lays Groundwork for 24 Run - The New York Times

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