Trump-Pence Ticket, Torn by Jan. 6, Becomes an
Unequal Rivalry
Trailed by the Capitol riot fallout and 2024
speculation, the two erstwhile allies gave competing speeches that revealed the
Republican Party’s enduring challenges and divisions.
This
article is part of our Midterms 2022 Daily Briefing
Michael C.
Bender
By Michael
C. Bender
July 26,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/26/us/politics/mike-pence-trump-speech-washington.html
WASHINGTON
— Eighteen months after departing the nation’s capital for the final time as
president, Donald J. Trump returned on Tuesday confronting federal
investigations, fresh doubts about his viability in an increasingly likely
third White House bid and an emerging rivalry with his erstwhile running mate.
In
addresses from two hotel ballrooms less than a mile apart in Washington, Mr.
Trump and Mike Pence, the vice president whom he had left at the mercy of a mob
of his supporters during the Capitol riot, put on clear display one of the most
uncomfortable splits inside their party.
The
competing speeches on the same day would have been inconceivable for a former
president and his own vice president not long ago. But the demise of precedent
has long been a hallmark of the Trump era.
The strange
tableau also illustrated many Republicans’ frustrations and reservations about
a 2024 Trump campaign, which a recent New York Times/Siena College poll
suggested could cause large numbers of Republican voters to defect from the
party in a general election.
In his
90-minute speech, Mr. Trump repeatedly veered off script to complain about
“hoax” investigations, boast about surviving two impeachments and lie about his
2020 election loss. Mr. Pence, by contrast, urged the party to look ahead and
unite for the next political battles.
“Some
people may choose to focus on the past, but elections are about the future,”
Mr. Pence said.
A scowling
Mr. Trump leaned on menacing imagery of an America besieged by violent crime
and in desperate need of a rescue that only he could provide.
“Our
country is going to hell,” he said. “It’s a very unsafe place.”
The two
appearances also underscored the wide gap in enthusiasm among Republicans
between Mr. Trump and any other potential primary rival in 2024.
While Mr.
Pence drew tepid applause during his 30-minute address to about 250 attendees
at an event hosted by the Young America’s Foundation, Mr. Trump commanded
numerous standing ovations from an audience of about 800 people at a gathering
of the America First Policy Institute. The former president’s speech seemed to
double as a reunion for former administration officials, campaign aides and
informal advisers.
Nearly
everyone, that is, except Mr. Pence.
Mr. Pence
has been a recurring target of criticism from Mr. Trump, who has denounced the
former vice president’s refusal to delay the certification of the 2020 election
results on Jan. 6, 2021. In his speech, Mr. Pence made only passing reference
to the ensuing attack on the Capitol — when he was forced into hiding as
rioters chanted for him to be hanged — as a “tragic day.”
Last week,
the House committee investigating the Capitol riot detailed Mr. Trump’s
decisions not to call off the violence, and the fear that members of Mr.
Pence’s Secret Service detail felt for their lives.
The hearing
prompted a striking shift in the conservative media. In scathing editorials
from two newspapers controlled by the Murdoch family, The New York Post said
Mr. Trump was “unworthy” to be president again, while The Wall Street Journal
opined that he had “utterly failed” his duty to handle the crisis.
And on
Monday, news emerged that two of Mr. Pence’s top aides had testified to a
federal grand jury in Washington as part of the Justice Department’s criminal
investigation into the events surrounding the riot. Furthermore, reports
emerged on Tuesday saying that federal prosecutors had sought information about
the former president’s role in the efforts to overturn the election as the
Justice Department’s inquiry accelerates.
While Mr.
Trump and Mr. Pence were in somewhat regular contact immediately after leaving
office — speaking several times by phone in conversations that avoided the
subject of the Capitol riot — they have not held similar discussions in months,
according to their advisers. In an interview last year, Mr. Trump said that he
had never told Mr. Pence he was sorry for not acting quicker to stop the attack
— and that Mr. Pence had never asked for an apology.
But a
rivalry has flared up behind the scenes.
One source
of tension has been the book Mr. Pence is writing about his time in the
administration. When Mr. Trump learned about the memoir, titled “So Help Me
God” and set to be published on Nov. 15, the former president was still musing
about obtaining a deal of his own.
But in most
parts of the publishing industry, Mr. Trump was broadly seen as a risk. The
former president appeared stung that Mr. Pence had gotten a multimillion-dollar
deal, and within days of learning about it, he attacked the former vice
president while speaking to donors at a Republican National Committee event at
Mar-a-Lago, seizing on Mr. Pence’s refusal to do what Mr. Trump wanted on Jan.
6.
This year,
the two men have veered from each other on the midterm campaign trail. They
have backed opposing candidates in several primary races, including the
Republican governor’s contest next week in Arizona, and the party’s primary for
governor in Georgia in June, when Mr. Pence’s pick, Gov. Brian Kemp, easily
defeated his Trump-backed challenger, David Perdue.
Mr. Pence,
meanwhile, left out of his speech the kind of effusive praise for Mr. Trump
that he had regularly injected into his addresses as vice president and instead
referred to the “Trump-Pence” administration’s accomplishments.
A
mild-mannered former governor of Indiana, Mr. Pence remains a reviled figure
among much of the Republican base — largely because he resisted Mr. Trump’s
attempts to subvert the 2020 election.
In a New
York Times/Siena College poll of Republican voters this month, just 6 percent
said they would vote for Mr. Pence if he ran for the 2024 Republican
presidential nomination, compared with 49 percent who said they backed Mr.
Trump and 25 percent who supported Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida.
Still, Mr.
Pence has been praised by some fellow Republicans for his steadfastness during,
and after, the Capitol riot. Pat Cipollone, the former White House counsel,
told House investigators that Mr. Pence deserved the Presidential Medal of
Freedom, one of the nation’s highest honors, for withstanding Mr. Trump’s
pressure campaign — and remaining on Capitol grounds amid the violence — to
certify the election.
Mr. Pence
also defended himself, and directly contradicted Mr. Trump, in a February
speech to the Federalist Society in Florida where he said the former president
incorrectly believed that the vice president had the authority to overturn
election results.
“President
Trump is wrong,” Mr. Pence said at the time. “I had no right to overturn the
election.”
But the
former vice president has been reluctant to revisit the issue. On Tuesday he
drew subtle distinctions between Mr. Trump’s fixation on the 2020 election and
his own preference to focus more broadly on his hopes for the conservative
movement.
In his
speech, Mr. Trump received some of his biggest applause when he strayed from
his prepared remarks, including his call to keep transgender women from playing
in women’s sports — and again when he claimed he had won the presidency a
second time.
Mr. Trump
also called for creating sprawling homeless encampments outside cities, which
would have bathrooms and medical staff, and he urged aggressive policies to
combat crime. He renewed his support for the death penalty for drug dealers and
for controversial stop-and-frisk law enforcement tactics that, he said, would
help “give police back their power and prestige.”
“Leave our
police alone,” Mr. Trump said. “Each time they do something, they’re afraid
they’re going to be destroyed, their pensions are going to be taken away,
they’ll be fired, they’ll be put in jail. Let them do their job.”
In his
speech, Mr. Pence celebrated the Supreme Court’s recent ruling eliminating the
federal right to abortion and called for a movement of cultural conservatives
to turn back a “pernicious woke agenda” that was, he argued, “allowing the
radical left to continue dumping toxic waste into the headwaters of our
culture.”
“We save
the babies, we’ll save America,” he said.
Still, Mr.
Pence couldn’t escape the direct contrast with Mr. Trump. When Mr. Pence
finished his speech, the first question from the audience of young
conservatives was about the former president “and the divide between the two of
you.”
“I don’t
know that our movement is that divided,” Mr. Pence said. “I don’t know that the
president and I differ on issues, but we may differ on focus.”
Maggie
Haberman contributed reporting.
Michael C.
Bender is a political correspondent and the author of “Frankly, We Did Win This
Election: The Inside Story of How Trump Lost.” @MichaelCBender


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