VP Pence gears up for onslaught of fundraising events
ANDERSON, Ind. — Vice President Mike Pence went home to Indiana on Friday to pressure the state’s lone Democratic senator to support a GOP tax overhaul. He’ll bounce to Alabama on Monday, campaigning for President Donald Trump’s pick in a special Senate election. And by Thursday, he’s scheduled to be in Milwaukee, headlining a $35,000-per-couple fundraiser.
Such is life for Pence, Trump’s political utility player, whose services are increasingly in demand as Republicans brace for a Democratic onslaught in the 2018 elections.
Pence is planning a torrent of campaign events across the county in the coming months, aiming to raise money for Trump’s re-election, reward incumbents for tough votes and help former colleagues from his 12-years in Congress. It’s a push that plays to the vice president’s sharpened skills and is also likely to bolster a political network that could serve him for years to come.
While Trump is a divisive figure whose presence could create a headache for a swing district incumbent, Pence comes with less baggage but still brings the celebrity of the White House, as well as his own prodigious fundraising ability.
A former talk radio host, congressman and Indiana governor, Pence has had plenty of time to hone his skills. He’s known to be adept at sizing up a room, knowing what message will play well and sticking to it.
Craig Dunn, a former GOP chairman in Indiana’s Howard County, says one of Pence’s strengths is he doesn’t “look over your shoulder to who is more important in the room.”
Pence has been far less effective as a deal-maker when trying to use his relationships with GOP leaders in Congress to advance the president’s agenda. The latest Trump-backed effort to repeal “Obamacare” all but flamed out Friday when Republican Sen. John McCain announced he wouldn’t vote for it. Pence breezed past that development during a speech a short while later in Anderson, Indiana, acknowledging that an anticipated vote next week was “not going to be easy” but insisting “President Trump and I are undeterred.”
The response was typical for a man who defaults to sunny optimism — mimicking his political idol, former President Ronald Reagan — while sometimes steering clear of inconvenient facts.