The Record (Troy, NY)

Would a President Pence fare better?

- JonahGoldb­erg holds the Asness Chair inAppliedL­iberty at the American Enterprise Institute and is a columnist for theLos Angeles Times.

What would a President Pence do?

It’s a question no one is asking, so I guess it falls tome.

In January 2020 it was almost as if God, the universe or our Lizard People overlords were giving the Republican­s one last chance to separate their fate from Trump’s. The Higher Power couldn’t actually tell the GOP, “If you don’t choose wisely, you’ll be stuck with him during a time of trials, tribulatio­ns and even a plague.”

But it’s not like they weren’t warned that the president would one day be tested beyond his abilities. Prophets don’t predict, they warn. And such warnings have been thick in the air for a very long time.

But few Republican­s heeded, and a complaisan­ce just shy of Stockholm syndrome finally set in. After all, the economy was humming, the normal rules of politics had not applied to this president for so long, and the base was so invested in Trump, best to keep your head down. Sodoma nd Gomorrah were fun towns while they lasted too.

Like a TV drama that needs to foreshadow the plot twists of the next season, the plague actually started as a subplot of the impeachmen­t drama. Tom Cotton left the Senate trial at one point to lobby the White House to take the strange illness plaguing the Chinese city of Wuhan seriously. It all seems so foreordain­ed in hindsight. Isn’t that always theway?

Of course, one might argue that the president shouldn’t have been removed from office because he wasn’t guilty. But few Republican­s, outside the president and his coterie, actually took this position. Mosthid behind the claim that the prosecutio­n hadn’t made its case, even as the Senate moved to block the prosecutio­n from fully making its case. A handful of senators, led by Lamar Alexander, conceded that Trump did abuse his power by pressuring Ukraine to muddy up Joe Biden, but that his mis steps weren’ t worth impeaching him over.

As Marco Rubio put it, “Just because actions meet a standard of impeachmen­t does not mean it is inthe best interest of the country to remove a president from office.” Fair enough.

But here we are.

And that raises the question: Would we be better off today without President Trump? Those who claimed, quite angrily that impeachmen­t would have overturned an election always ignored the fact that the 12th Amendment prevents that. Removal would have delivered a President Pence, not a President Clinton.

It’s self-evident that Pence would have handled the pandemic better. His stewardshi­p of the White House coronaviru­s task force was marked by quiet, assured and reassuring, profession­alism. If he hawked hydroxy chloroquin­e or bleach as potential miracle cures, I missed it.

It is true, of course, that whenever given the opportunit­y to put distance between himself and the president, Pence never does. It feels tome, though, that this is because he is in hostage mode, stoically reciting into the camera whatever his captor has demanded he say. I always look for signs that he is trying to blink the Morse code for “TORTURE” into the cameras, but so far I haven’t seen it.

With Pence as president, it’s unlikely the White House would have launched the Battle of Lafayette Park, nor would Pence have floated conspiracy theories about Joe Scarboroug­h being a murderer or a 75-year-old Buffaloman being an Antifa provocateu­r. More broadly, the policies that Trump enablers claim are the benefits that come with the transactio­nal costs of tolerating— or even celebratin­g— the self-destructiv­e drama of his presidency would disappear.

While the country would be in better shape, it’s hard to knowif the GOP would be, at least in the short term. On one hand, post-impeachmen­t Pence surely would have gotten the rally-around-theleader bump that Trump frittered away (and that nearly all state governors are still enjoying).

On the other hand, Trump’s rage-tweeting fromhis Mar-aLago Elba certainly would have created problems for the Republican senators who voted to convict. But the contrast between the staid President Pence and his predecesso­rmight actually help Pence attract the Republican-friendly voters Trumphas scared away.

More importantl­y, the same “binary choice” logic constantly used to justify support for Trump would apply. Do youwant to give the Democrats total control of government or do youwant to hold your nose and vote for the lesser evil?

Obviously, it’s all spilled milk now. But it’s a usefulment­al exercise nonetheles­s. Because if the suggestion that we would be better off had the Republican­s removed Trump from office enrages you— beyond your pet theories of the impeachmen­t case against him— itmight indicate your support ofTrump is less transactio­nal thanyou like to claim.

 ??  ?? Jonah Goldberg The National Review
Jonah Goldberg The National Review

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