Pence pitches U.S. energy independence in Cincinnati
CINCINNATI — Former Vice President Mike Pence on Thursday blasted the energy policies of President Joe Biden, placing the blame for $5-plus prices at the gasoline pump in his lap and not Russian President Vladamir Putin’s.
“The last few days President Biden referred to Mr. Putin’s gasoline hike. The truth is gasoline prices had risen more than 50% before the first shot was fired in Ukraine,” Mr. Pence said during a roundtable discussion with Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine that was hosted by the Ohio Oil and Gas Energy Education Program.
“Gasoline prices are rising for working families here in Ohio and across America, not because of the war in Ukraine,” he said. “Gasoline prices are rising because of Joe Biden’s war on energy, and we must bring the war on energy to an end.”
The former vice president spoke at a manufacturing plant in the Queen City as his name was being repeatedly invoked in Washington over former boss Donald Trump’s attempts to pressure him into blocking certification of Mr. Biden’s 2020 victory.
Pence aides and legal counsel told the congressional committee examining the events of that day at Thursday’s hearing and in previous depositions that the vice president never had the authority to reject certification of state results showing the president had lost re-election.
Mr. Pence, former governor of neighboring Indiana, refused to answer questions shouted to him by reporters beyond his energy remarks.
The substance of the roundtable discussion itself was also off-limits to reporters.
The event was promoted to the media by Advancing American Freedom, a conservative Washington-based nonprofit founded by Mr. Pence as he moves toward his own possible 2024 presidential run.
“It’s extraordinary to think how far we have fallen in such a short period of time,” Mr. Pence said. “Under the Trump-Pence administration, we unleashed American energy and became a net exporter of energy for the first time in 75 years. But because of the policies of this administration since day one, Americans are now experiencing inflation at a 40-year high.
“Gasoline prices have skyrocketed and are now averaging over $5 a gallon,” he said. “One of the advantages of no longer being vice president is you get to drive your own car. One of the disadvantages is you get to pay for your own gas. I have literally been at the pump.”
He blamed Mr. Biden for canceling approval of the Keystone pipeline and rejoining the Paris climate accord while giving a nod to a new gas pipeline between Russia and Europe.
In reaction to the event, Nolan Rutschilling, managing director of energy policy for the Ohio Environment Council, said wind and solar represent a direct path to energy independence.
“We simply cannot drill our way to energy independence or lower gas prices,” he said.
Mr. Pence was testing the political waters in Ohio as a U.S. House committee — including two Republicans who supported Mr. Trump’s impeachment — dissects the assault on the U.S. Capitol last year that sought to block the then-vice president’s constitutional role of certifying Mr. Biden’s victory.