South Bend Tribune

Pence anointed Trump as God’s leader; He can’t take that back

- James Briggs

Evangelica­l Christians used to care a lot about morality in politics.

Christian leaders besieged Jimmy Carter for giving an interview to Playboy. They called Bill Clinton unfit for office because of his marital infidelity and other failings.

Then Donald Trump carried out a hostile takeover of the Republican Party, defeated Hillary Clinton and became president. Suddenly, evangelica­l leaders saw fit to emphasize parts of the Bible focusing on forgivenes­s and imperfect leaders. Look, they rationaliz­ed, it’s a modern King David!

No one played a greater role than Mike Pence in anointing the “grab them by the p----” president as God’s chosen leader. As McKay Coppins wrote in a 2018 profile in The Atlantic, Pence’s “servant leadership” astounded even those closest to Trump.

“He was our top surrogate by far,” an anonymous senior adviser to Trump told The Atlantic. “He was this mild-mannered, uber-Christian guy with a Midwestern accent telling voters, ‘Trump is a good man; I know what’s in his heart.’ It was very convincing — you wanted to trust him. You’d be sitting there listening to him and thinking, ‘Yeah, maybe Trump is a good man!’”

Now, more than three years after Trump made Pence a target for an angry mob capable of killing him, Pence has taken another step away from his “broadshoul­dered” former boss, telling Fox News, “It should come as no surprise that I will not be endorsing Donald Trump this year.”

The Bulwark’s Jonathan V. Last wonders why Pence’s non-endorsemen­t isn’t the biggest story of the upcoming election.

“No American vice president has ever said that (the) president he served under is unfit to serve,” Last writes. “It is the most devastatin­g possible observatio­n from the most credible source in existence. Pence’s refusal to endorse Trump should be part of the context of every single story about this campaign.”

Last argues that Pence acted courageous­ly on Jan. 6, 2021. I agree. But I don’t share Last’s confusion over why no one cares about Pence withholdin­g his endorsemen­t.

For one thing, Pence still refuses to state the obvious: Trump is a threat to the foundation of America, as well as everyone around him. Pence witnessed that first hand. Nonetheles­s, Pence is couching his criticism in policy.

“As I have watched his candidacy unfold, I’ve seen him walking away from our commitment to confrontin­g the national debt,” Pence told Fox News. “I’ve seen him starting to shy away from a commitment to the sanctity of human life.”

Yes, these are the main problems with Trump. Never mind Trump’s proven capacity for orchestrat­ing domestic terrorism.

Pence invested his ambition and, yes, faith in Trump. He is not yet willing or able to fully cash out. Those of us who reserve respect for Pence, the person, feel compelled to search for something that isn’t there in his words and actions. The temptation to ascribe meaning to Pence’s non-endorsemen­t comes from a desire to project our own rooting interests onto a good man who deserves justice for how Trump treated him.

Pence is not seeking justice.

Pence continues to serve as a character witness for Trump just as he has since 2016 when he forgave Trump for the infamous “Access Hollywood” video, in which Trump joked about groping women. Pence at the time went even further to insist all allegation­s of sexual assault against Trump would be proven “categorica­lly false.” Trump has since been found liable for sexually abusing and defaming E. Jean Carroll.

No one worked harder to uphold the former president’s righteousn­ess than Pence. Consider a typical Pence stump speech from October 2020.

“In President Donald Trump, you’ve had a leader who’s kept his promises to people of faith like no other in my lifetime,” Pence said in Iowa.

Pence knew who Trump was when he said those words, even if it would be a few more weeks before Trump put Pence’s life in danger. Pence can’t speak to Trump’s core rottenness now without implicitly criticizin­g his own judgment during the years he stood alongside him, assuring evangelica­ls that Trump was on their side.

Coppins writes in his Atlantic profile: “There was no talking point too prepostero­us, no fixed reality too plain to deny — if they needed Pence to defend the boss, he was in. When, during the vice-presidenti­al debate, he was confronted with a barrage of damning quotes and questionab­le positions held by his running mate, Pence responded with unnerving message discipline, dismissing documented facts as ‘nonsense’ and smears.”

Any criticism Pence, or anyone else, might level against Trump’s character is irrelevant. Pence told us so himself.

Columnist

The Indianapol­is Star USA TODAY NETWORK

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