Chattanooga Times Free Press

Mike Pence faces questions about primary campaign

Former VP short on campaign cash

- BY JILL COLVIN

NEW YORK — With three months to go before the Iowa caucuses that he has staked his campaign on, former Vice President Mike Pence faces mounting debt and lagging poll numbers that are forcing questions about not only whether he will qualify for the next debate, but whether it makes sense for him to remain in the race until then.

Pence ended September with just $1.18 million left in his campaign account, a strikingly low number for a presidenti­al contest and far less than his rivals, new filings show. His campaign also has $621,000 in debt — more than half the cash he had remaining — and is scrambling to meet donor thresholds for the Nov. 8 debate. While he would likely meet the debate’s polling requiremen­ts, Pence has struggled to gain traction and is polling in the low single digits nationally, with no sign of momentum.

Former President Donald Trump, meanwhile, is leading every one of his rivals by at least 40 points in national polls and ended September with $37.5 million on hand.

People close to Pence say he now faces a choice about how long to stay in the race and whether remaining a candidate might potentiall­y diminish his long-term standing in the party, given Trump’s dominating lead. While Pence could stick it out until the Jan. 15 Iowa caucuses, visiting the state’s famous Pizza Ranch restaurant­s and campaignin­g on a shoestring budget, he must now weigh how that will impact his desire to remain a leading conservati­ve voice, according to the people, some of whom spoke on condition of anonymity to share their unvarnishe­d views.

“For Pence and many of the others, you gotta start looking and saying, ‘I’m not going to go into substantia­l debt if I don’t see a pathway forward,’” said former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, who ran against Trump in 2016 but abandoned his bid after concluding “the Trump train had left the station.”

Pence, for the moment, is pressing forward. He held a Newsmax town hall in Iowa Tuesday night and fundraiser­s this week in Cleveland, Philadelph­ia and Dallas. He was to speak at the Republican National Committee’s fall retreat Friday night and at the Republican Jewish Coalition’s Annual Leadership Summit in Las Vegas next week — all opportunit­ies to pitch deep-pocketed donors to keep his campaign afloat.

The super PAC supporting Pence is also continuing its efforts, fundraisin­g and conducting extensive voter outreach, including knocking on nearly 600,000 doors and counting.

 ?? AP PHOTO/JACQUELYN MARTIN ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate and former Vice President Mike Pence speaks Oct. 3 during an Associated Press 2024 GOP Presidenti­al Candidates Conversati­ons on National Security and Foreign Policy event at Georgetown University in Washington.
AP PHOTO/JACQUELYN MARTIN Republican presidenti­al candidate and former Vice President Mike Pence speaks Oct. 3 during an Associated Press 2024 GOP Presidenti­al Candidates Conversati­ons on National Security and Foreign Policy event at Georgetown University in Washington.

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