The Herald

Trump’s ‘reckless words’ endangered my family, Pence claims in memoir

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FORMER vice president Mike Pence has blamed Donald Trump for endangerin­g his family “and all those serving at the Capitol” during the January 6 riots in a new memoir.

So Help Me God is Mr Pence’s first account of the Republican former president’s extraordin­ary effort to push him to overturn the results of the 2020 election.

Writing about the day thousands of rioters stormed the Capitol in Washington DC – with some chanting “Hang Mike Pence” – he says: “They had come to protest the result of the election and to prevent Congress from fulfilling its responsibi­lity to open and count the Electoral College votes.

“And, as I later learned, many had come looking for me.”

The book, which traces Mr

Pence’s life in politics – from serving as youth co-ordinator for a local Democratic Party to watching thenvice president Al Gore certify his election loss days after Mr Pence had been sworn in as a member of Congress – largely defends Mr Trump, glossing over and whitewashi­ng many of his most contentiou­s episodes.

But he makes clear that January 6, 2021, was a breaking point in which Mr Trump’s “reckless words had endangered my family and all those serving at the Capitol”.

“For four years, we had a close working relationsh­ip. It did not end well,” he writes.

“We parted amicably when our service to the nation drew to a close. In the months that followed, we spoke from time to time, but when the president returned to the rhetoric that he was using before that tragic day and began to publicly criticise those of us who defended the Constituti­on, I decided it would be best to go our separate ways.”

The book, published by Simon & Schuster, comes as Mr Pence appears increasing­ly likely run for president in 2024, a move that would put him in direct conflict with Mr Trump, who is expected to formally launch his own re-election campaign in Florida.

Mr Pence never directly states that Democrat Joe Biden won the election fairly, and writes that when Mr Trump first suggested holding a rally in Washington on January 6, the day Mr Pence was set to preside over the election’s certificat­ion, he thought it was a good idea.

“My first thought was that a rally that day might be useful as a way to call even more attention to the proceeding­s on the floor of the House and Senate,” he writes.

Instead, he describes sitting in the Senate chamber and presiding over the certificat­ion when a Senate parliament­arian leaned over to inform him that rioters had breached the building and a member of his Secret Service detail rushing over to insist they leave.

Mr Pence refused to leave the building and was instead ushered to a Senate loading dock, where he spent hours, surrounded by staff and family members, making calls to military and congressio­nal leaders to co-ordinate the government’s response, as Mr Trump – who never bothered to check on his safety – sat watching TV.

“All around was a blur of motion and chaos: security and police officers directing people to safety, staffers shouting and running for shelter. I could see the intensity in the eyes of the Secret Service detail; it was audible, too, in the voices of the Capitol Police. I could hear the fall of footsteps and angry chanting,” Mr Pence writes.

But he insists he was “not afraid”, only angry at what was unfolding.

When Mr Pence in hiding, Mr Trump sent the infamous tweet saying his former ally “didn’t have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our Country and our Constituti­on”.

“I just shook my head,” Mr Pence said. “The truth was, as reckless as the president’s tweet was, I really didn’t have time for it. Rioters were ransacking the Capitol. The president had decided to be part of the problem. I was determined to be part of the solution.”

 ?? ?? Mike Pence pictured with then President Donald Trump in 2020
Mike Pence pictured with then President Donald Trump in 2020

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