Porterville Recorder

Pence opens presidenti­al bid with denunciati­on of Trump

- By JILL COLVIN and THOMAS BEAUMONT

ANKENY, Iowa — Former Vice President Mike Pence opened his bid for the Republican nomination for president Wednesday with a firm denunciati­on of former President Donald Trump, accusing his two-time running mate of abandoning conservati­ve principles and being guilty of derelictio­n of duty on Jan. 6, 2021.

On that perilous day, Pence said, as Trump supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol and the president falsely insisted his vice president could overturn the election results, Trump "demanded I choose between him and our Constituti­on. Now voters will be faced with the same choice."

Pence, launching his campaign at a community college in a suburb of Des Moines, is the first vice president in modern history to challenge the president under whom he served. While he spent much of his speech criticizin­g Democratic President Joe Biden and the direction he has taken the country, he also addressed Jan. 6 head-on, saying Trump had disqualifi­ed himself when he declared falsely that Pence had the power to keep him in office.

Trump's statements about mass voting fraud led a mob of his supporters to storm the U.S. Capitol, sending Pence and his family scrambling for safety as some in the crowd chanted, "Hang Mike Pence!"

"I believe anyone that puts themselves over the Constituti­on should never be president of the United States, and anyone who asks someone else to put them over the Constituti­on should never be president of the United Sates again," the former vice president said.

Yet he did not rule out anyone when asked on Fox News Channel if he would support Trump if the former president wins the GOP nomination.

"I will absolutely support the Republican nominee in 2024, especially if it's me," Pence said, "I think we've got a great group of men and women running for this nomination, and I do believe we've got better choices in the days ahead."

Pence has spent much of the past two-and-ahalf-years grappling with fallout from that day as he has tried to chart a political future in a party that remains deeply loyal to Trump and filled with many who still believe Trump's lies that the 2020 election was stolen and that Pence somehow could reject the results.

While Pence has criticized Trump, working to step out of the former president's shadow while laying the groundwork for his own run, he has generally done so obliquely, reflecting Trump's continued popularity in the party. But Wednesday, as Pence made his pitch to voters for the first time as a declared candidate, he did not hold his tongue.

He accused the former president of abandoning the conservati­ve values he ran on, including on abortion.

Pence, who supports a national ban on the procedure, said, "After leading the most prolife administra­tion in American history, Donald Trump and others in this race are retreating from the cause of the unborn. The sanctity of life has been our party's calling for half a century — long before Donald Trump was a part of it. Now he treats it as an inconvenie­nce, even blaming our election losses in 2022 on overturnin­g Roe v. Wade."

Trump has declined to say what limits he supports nationally and has blamed some midterm candidates' strong rhetoric for their losses last November.

Pence also bemoaned the current politics of "grudges and grievances," saying the country needs leaders who know the difference between the "politics of outrage and standing firm."

"We will restore a threshold of civility in public life," he pledged

Trump did not immediatel­y respond to the speech, but his supporters shot back.

"The question most GOP voters are asking themselves about Pence's candidacy is 'Why?'" said Karoline Leavitt, a spokeswoma­n for a Trump-backing super PAC.

With Pence's entry into the race, on his 64th birthday, the GOP field is largely set. It includes Trump, who's leading in early polls, Florida Gov. Ron Desantis, who remains in second, former United Nations Ambassador Nikki Haley, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie.

Pence's campaign will test the party's appetite for a socially conservati­ve, mild-mannered and deeply religious candidate who has criticized the populist tide that has swept through his party under Trump. Pence, in many ways, represents a throwback to a party from days past. Unlike Trump and Desantis, he argues cuts to Social Security and Medicare must be on the table and has blasted those who have questioned why the U.S. should continue to send aid to Ukraine to counter Russian aggression.

Pence and his advisers see Iowa — the state that will cast the first votes of the GOP nominating calendar — as key to his pathway to the nomination. Its caucusgoer­s include a large portion of evangelica­l Christian voters, whom they see as a natural constituen­cy for Pence, a social conservati­ve who often talks about his faith.

But Pence faces steep challenges. Despite being one of the bestknown Republican candidates in the crowded field, he is viewed skepticall­y by voters on both the center and the right. Trump critics consider him complicit in the former president's most indefensib­le actions, while many Trump loyalists have maligned him as a traitor, partly to blame for denying the president a second term.

A CNN poll conducted last month found 45% of Republican­s and Republican-leaning independen­ts said they would not support Pence under any circumstan­ce. And in Iowa, a March Des Moines Register/mediacom Iowa Poll found Pence with higher unfavorabl­e ratings than all of the other candidates it asked about, including Trump and Desantis.

But Pence, who has visited Iowa more than a dozen times since leaving office, has been warmly welcomed by voters during his trips.

His Wednesday audience in an auditorium decorated with red, white and blue balloons included a number of Iowa Republican officials, including former Iowa Rep. Greg Ganske, whose time in Congress overlapped briefly with Pence's.

"I'm here because we're friends," said Ganske who represente­d the Des Moines area in the House. Still, he said he hadn't figured out who he was going to support in the caucuses. "We have a lot of good candidates," he said.

John Steuterman, a 44-year-old insurance executive, said he was drawn to Pence's experience in the White House and was "tired of the negativity" another Trump term would bring.

"Mike Pence is a decent man. He seems like a regular guy, as much of a regular guy who has been at the center of the executive decision-making of the most powerful country in the world," he said.

 ?? AP PHOTO/CHARLIE NEIBERGALL ?? Republican presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Mike Pence and his wife Karen arrives to speak at a campaign event, Wednesday, June 7, 2023, in Ankeny, Iowa.
AP PHOTO/CHARLIE NEIBERGALL Republican presidenti­al candidate former Vice President Mike Pence and his wife Karen arrives to speak at a campaign event, Wednesday, June 7, 2023, in Ankeny, Iowa.

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