The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Pence visits Pa., ready to call it a comeback

- By Kevin Freking

It’s time to spread the good news. That’s the difficult job Vice President Mike Pence undertook Friday as the Trump administra­tion works to make voters feel better about the direction of the country amid a coronaviru­s pandemic and racial unrest.

Pence traveled Friday to Pennsylvan­ia, an important swing state with 20 electoral votes that will be bitterly contested. He began with a listening session with faith and community leaders to hear their concerns following the death of George Floyd by police in Minneapoli­s. He later talked up the economy at a manufactur­ing plant.

Pence stressed the same points that President Donald Trump has made, but with a bit more realism. While Trump told those in Dallas on Thursday that bringing Americans together will “go quickly” and “very easily,” Pence spoke in Pittsburgh about finding opportunit­ies “in the long term” to address what he described as some historic inequities.

Pence’s visit comes at a time when polls suggest that a growing percentage of Americans view the the country as heading in the wrong direction. The president’s prospects for reelection rely greatly on turning that trend around. Trump seized on a better-than-expected jobs report released last week, and his campaign quickly made an ad proclaimin­g “the great American comeback has begun.”

But he can’t just focus on the economy. The administra­tion also must address the concerns raised by the recent killings of Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Ahmad Aubery.

Pence’s trip to Pennsylvan­ia was part of what is described as the “Great American Comeback Tour.” The visit was organized by America First Policies, a nonprofit associated with the America First Action super PAC supporting Trump’s reelection.

Joe Biden’s Democratic presidenti­al campaign called it a “cynically-titled” tour.

“This is not a time for victory laps,” said Biden campaign manager Kate Bedingfiel­d. “The pandemic continues to claim nearly a thousand American lives every day and unemployme­nt in our nation remains at Depression-era levels.”

For Pence, visiting with ministers is friendly territory. While criticism of Black Lives Matter is out, criticism of Planned Parenthood is in as the conversati­on can quickly turn to the issue of abortion, as it did a few times Friday. Still, the participan­ts voiced their frustratio­ns with Pence in a way that was not visible when Trump met with black supporters at the White House earlier this week.

“I’m tired. I am mentally, physically and spirituall­y tired,” said Ross Owens, a local pastor who said he grew up in one of the poorest neighborho­ods of Pittsburgh. “I’m tired that people still do not acknowledg­e that systemic racism is real, and they ignore the billions of voices that exists, and they say, ‘No, that’s not true,’ because of the comfort of their own bubble.”

“I can tell you that I have three sons who have been stopped collective­ly at least a dozen times by the police, even some black police in the city of Pittsburgh,” said Cheryl Allen, a former judge on the Superior Court of Pennsylvan­ia. “It’s a mindset that if you are a young black man driving a nice car, you must either be a drug dealer or you stole the car.”

She said her children were never charged and noted that when police learned who owned the car, that tended to be “the end of the story.”

“But that’s not the case for most people,” Allen said.

Pence told the group that “this is just about the best hour I’ve had in a long time” and called it “real.”

In the afternoon, Pence turned to the economy with a speech at Oberg Industries in Sarver, a town about 30 miles (48 kilometers) northeast of Pittsburgh.

Pennsylvan­ia’s unemployme­nt rate stood at 15.1% in April as companies closed to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s. It was at 5.7% when Trump was elected. Hiring did rebound in May after two grueling months of job losses. But those gains appear to reflect temporaril­y laid-off employees returning to work and increases in people with part-time jobs.

Pence chose to place his emphasis on the number of jobs created in May rather than those lost the previous two months. He noted that May’s gain of 2.5 million jobs was a record and that economists had been expecting companies to slash 8 million jobs.

“We’re very confident that it’s just the beginning, and this American comeback has just begun,” Pence said.

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 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Vice President Mike Pence speaks during a discussion at the Covenant Church of Pittsburgh in Wilkinsbur­g, Pa., on Friday.
KEITH SRAKOCIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Vice President Mike Pence speaks during a discussion at the Covenant Church of Pittsburgh in Wilkinsbur­g, Pa., on Friday.

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