OPINION
CHARLES M.
BLOW
Mike Pence Is Spineless
Aug. 21,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/21/opinion/mike-pence-is-spineless.html
Charles M.
Blow
By Charles
M. Blow
Opinion
Columnist
There is
one thing about Mike Pence: He shows himself to be a spineless weasel every
chance he gets.
Just last
Wednesday, Pence said in a speech that he would “consider” testifying before
the Jan. 6 committee if summoned. What does that mean? They want to talk to
him, and he knows it.
We’ve known
for weeks that Pence’s lawyer and the panel have been talking informally about
having him speak to investigators.
Is he
fishing for a subpoena so it would look as if he had been compelled? Is he
simply muddying the waters? It’s always hard to tell with Pence. People with
unclear convictions are doomed to communicate unclearly.
Last
January, a mob went to the Capitol and threatened the life of Pence. Rioters
yelled, “Hang Mike Pence!” A gallows was erected. He barely escaped the
rioters.
And yet
this man is still so caught up in the politics of not wanting to run afoul of
Donald Trump’s cult that he treads lightly in many of his comments about the
former president and that horrible day.
The public
is left to parse oblique phrases as Pence attempts to put a little distance
between himself and Trump without truly turning on him.
Pence seems
to be under some delusion that he has a chance at being elected president. In
what world? Trump’s cult still hates him, and no Democrats worth their salt
would cross over to vote for him.
Maybe he is
holding out hope that one of Trump’s many scandals will do in the former
president. But even in that case, Trump 2.0, Ron DeSantis, will be there to
take up the mantle.
Maybe Pence
believes that there are enough old-school, mainline Republicans silently
sulking in the wings, waiting for a more traditional Republican like him to
step in, someone who has touched the hem of the garment but has not put on the
straitjacket, someone who is not Trump but was Trump adjacent.
This is, of
course, a fantasy inflated by blind ambition.
Almost no
one wants a President Pence. He doesn’t have a lane or much of a chance. He’s a
horrible politician. Even Republicans in Indiana, where he was governor, were
happy that Trump picked him to run for vice president and took him out of the
state, because Pence’s term had been so strained.
While Trump
was considering Pence for the vice-presidential slot in 2016, CNN reported,
“Removing Pence from the governor’s race, several senior Indiana Republican
officials, aides and operatives said, would allow the state G.O.P. to escape
from the turmoil of years of social battles over same-sex marriage and
religious freedom.”
Trump, a
thrice-married show-off with no real religious identity, needed Pence in 2016
to help reassure Republicans. Trump was, after all, the guy who said the Bible
was his favorite book but struggled to name a favorite verse. When asked to do
so in 2015, he dodged with this unbelievable answer: “When I talk about the Bible,
it’s very personal, so I don’t want to get into it,” he said. “The Bible means
a lot to me, but I don’t want to get into specifics.”
That’s
ridiculous. Personal? Sharing your favorite Bible verse isn’t like sharing your
medical history. The Bible repeatedly exhorts Christians to share the Gospel,
not to keep it guarded like your hand in a card game.
It says in
2 Timothy 4:2, “Preach the word; be ready in season and out of season; reprove,
rebuke and exhort, with complete patience and teaching.”
When Trump
chose Pence as his running mate, he was giving him a role he could handle.
Pence would be Trump’s religious shield: upright, simple and obsequious. Pence
needed only to gush at Trump in public like a teenager in love. Job done.
For four
years, Pence would laud and applaud the boss, loyal as a lap dog.
Then Pence
realized what others already knew: With Trump, all relationships are
transactional, and loyalty isn’t reciprocal.
Pence, the
supposed religious man, had shielded and excused all manner of dishonest and
immoral behavior by Trump, only to be on the receiving end of Trump’s ire. But
still, Pence can’t fully confess to the wrong that he himself wrought.
During the
Trump years, Pence was an enabler and an accomplice. He shared in the cruelty
of it all, the crime of it all, the corruption of it all. This is not to say
that he was always an active participant, but he helped to sell Trump and
consistently defended him.
Yes, Pence
did the right thing on Jan. 6, but that doesn’t change the fact that up until
then, he carried himself like a coward. When he gave his Wednesday speech, he
even gave a wishy-washy answer to a question about the F.B.I. search of
Mar-a-Lago. He defended the F.B.I. rank and file, but said we can still hold
the attorney general “accountable.” Hold him accountable for what?
This was
just more Pence doublespeak, always wanting to have it both ways.
If I had
ever held Pence in high regard, I would say that I was disappointed in him. But
I never did.
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Charles M.
Blow joined The Times in 1994 and became an Opinion columnist in 2008. He is
also a television commentator and writes often about politics, social justice
and vulnerable communities. @CharlesMBlow • Facebook


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