Pence Looks Toward 2024 Run, Using Reagan’s
Playbook, Not Trump’s
A pro-Pence super PAC is being formed, and so is a
plan to barnstorm Iowa. “This campaign is going to reintroduce Mike Pence to
the country as his own man,” a G.O.P. operative said.
Jonathan
Swan Maggie Haberman Shane Goldmacher
By Jonathan
Swan, Maggie Haberman and Shane Goldmacher
May 15,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/15/us/politics/pence-2024-preparations.html
Former Vice
President Mike Pence is expected to soon declare a long-shot campaign for the
White House against the president under whom he served, pitching himself as a
“classical conservative” who would return the Republican Party to its pre-Trump
roots, according to people close to Mr. Pence.
Mr. Pence
is working to carve out space in the Republican primary field by appealing to
evangelicals, adopting a hard-line position in support of a federal abortion
ban, promoting free trade and pushing back against Republican efforts to police
big business on ideological grounds. He faces significant challenges, trails
far behind in the polls and has made no effort to channel the populist energies
overtaking the Republican Party.
In a sign
his campaign will be announced in the coming weeks, a pro-Pence super PAC
called Committed to America is being set up. A veteran Republican operative,
Scott Reed, who ran Bob Dole’s 1996 presidential campaign and was the longtime
top political strategist for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, will lead the group
alongside Jeb Hensarling, a close friend of Mr. Pence’s who served with him in
Congress.
Mr. Pence
finds himself in the highly unusual position of being a former vice president
trying to squeeze back into the national conversation. The political profile he
built under former President Donald J. Trump was more supplicant than
standard-bearer, at least until the rupture in their relationship on Jan. 6,
2021. He would begin far behind Mr. Trump and Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida in
early national and state polls of 2024 Republican primary voters.
The Pence
candidacy will focus heavily on winning over evangelical voters, especially in
Iowa, where the super PAC is already preparing to organize all 99 counties.
Iowa’s caucuses are the first contests for Republican presidential contenders
early next year.
“Iowa feels
more like Indiana than any other state in the union,” Mr. Pence, a former
governor of Indiana, said in a recent interview. “It just feels like home.”
On a recent
call with reporters, Mr. Reed, who will help lead the pro-Pence super PAC,
described the Iowa caucuses as the “defining event” of Mr. Pence’s candidacy
and foreshadowed an old-fashioned blitz of retail politics. “We’re going to
organize Iowa, all 99 counties, like we’re running him for county sheriff,” he
said.
If Mr.
Trump represents the populist New Right, Mr. Pence is preparing to run for
president in the mold of Ronald Reagan. His team’s improbable bet is that a
“Reagan coalition” — composed of the Christian right, fiscal conservatives and
national security hawks — can be reassembled within a party transformed by Mr.
Trump.
The race
begins. Four years after a historically large number of candidates ran for
president, the field for the 2024 campaign is starting out small and is likely
to be headlined by the same two men who ran last time: President Biden and
Donald Trump. Here’s who has entered the race so far, and who else might run:
President
Biden. The president has cast himself as a protector of democracy and a
stabilizing force after the upheaval of the Trump administration. Biden is
running for re-election as the oldest person ever to hold the presidency, a
subject of concern among many Democrats, though the party has publicly set
aside those worries and rallied around him.
Donald
Trump. The former president is running to retake the office he lost in 2020.
Though somewhat diminished in influence within the Republican Party — and
facing several legal investigations — he retains a large and committed base of
supporters, and he could be aided in the primary by multiple challengers
splitting a limited anti-Trump vote.
Nikki
Haley. The former governor of South Carolina and U.N. ambassador under Trump
has presented herself as a member of “a new generation of leadership” and
emphasized her life experience as a daughter of Indian immigrants. She was long
seen as a rising G.O.P. star but her allure in the party has declined amid her
on-again, off-again embrace of Trump.
Asa
Hutchinson. The former governor of Arkansas is one of a relatively small number
of Republicans who have been openly critical of Trump. Hutchinson has denounced
the former president’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election and said Trump
should drop out of the presidential race.
Marianne
Williamson. The self-help author and former spiritual adviser to Oprah Winfrey
is running for a second time. In her 2020 campaign, the Democrat called for a
federal Department of Peace, supported reparations for slavery and called
Trumpism a symptom of an illness in the American psyche that could not be cured
with political policies.
Vivek
Ramaswamy. The multimillionaire entrepreneur and author describes himself as
“anti-woke” and is known in right-wing circles for opposing corporate efforts
to advance political, social and environmental causes. He has never held
elected office and does not have the name recognition of most other G.O.P.
contenders.
Larry
Elder. The conservative talk radio host, who was a breakout star for the right
after running unsuccessfully in California’s recall election in 2021, announced
on Tucker Carlson’s show on Fox News that he was running for president, saying
that he had “a moral, religious and a patriotic duty to give back to a country
that’s been so good to my family and me.”
Robert
Kennedy. The Democrat, a longtime vaccine skeptic and a member of the Kennedy
political dynasty declared that he would challenge President Biden for the
Democratic nomination in a long-shot bid for the White House.
Others who
might run. Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, former Gov. Chris Christie of New
Jersey, former Vice President Mike Pence, Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina
and Gov. Chris Sununu of New Hampshire are seen as weighing Republican bids for
the White House.
In a
Tuesday night speech in New Hampshire focused on economics, Mr. Pence is
expected to call for “free trade with free nations,” according to a person
familiar with the draft.
He is
casting himself as a “Reagan conservative” and staking out sharply different
positions from Mr. Trump and Mr. DeSantis on the most important policy
questions framing the Republican 2024 race. Still, running against Mr. Trump so
directly will force Mr. Pence to confront the contradictions inherent in having
served as the president’s yes-man for four years through the turmoil of the
Trump administration.
“This
campaign is going to reintroduce Mike Pence to the country as his own man,” Mr.
Reed said. “People know Mike Pence. They just don’t know him well.”
It remains
to be seen how frequently Mr. Pence will discuss the moment that has defined
him for the last two years: his rejection on Jan. 6 of Mr. Trump’s pressure
campaign to get him to exceed his constitutional authority while President
Biden’s Electoral College victory was certified.
That issue
is not a winning one with the base of the Republican Party. But Mr. Pence’s
team believes there are enough Republicans who might be won over by Mr. Pence
describing the moment as adhering to constitutional principles.
Mr. Pence
stands almost alone among the prospective Republican field in advocating views
that were once standard issue for his party.
Case in
point: Mr. Pence says Social Security and Medicare must be trimmed back as part
of any serious plan to deal with the national debt. Before Mr. Trump entered
national politics in 2015, cutting entitlement programs was Republican
orthodoxy. But Mr. Trump changed that. The former president has promised in his
third campaign not to cut either program and he has attacked Mr. DeSantis on
the issue, claiming the governor would cut those programs.
“It is
fairly remarkable that Joe Biden and Donald Trump have the same position on
fiscal solvency: The position of never going to touch Social Security and
Medicare,” Mr. Pence said.
Mr. Pence
said he would “explain to people” how the “debt crisis” would affect their
children and grandchildren. He says his plan to cut benefits won’t apply to
Social Security and Medicare payments for people in retirement today or who
will retire in the next 25 years. But he will pitch ideas to cut spending for people under 40.
Mr. Pence
is also drawing a stark contrast on foreign policy. Both Mr. Trump and Mr.
DeSantis have questioned whether the United States should be supporting Ukraine
in its fight against Russia’s invasion. Mr. Pence sees the battle as a modern
version of the Cold War.
“There’s a
bit of a movement afoot in the Republican Party that would abandon our
commitment to being the leader of the free world and that questions why we’re
providing military support in Ukraine,” Mr. Pence said.
Unlike
almost every major Republican running for president, Mr. Pence still defends
former President George W. Bush’s decisions to invade Afghanistan and Iraq,
though he acknowledged in the interview that the “weapons of mass destruction”
intelligence that Mr. Bush used to justify the Iraqi invasion was wrong.
“In the
aftermath of September 11th, the president articulated a doctrine that I wholly
supported,” Mr. Pence said, “which was that it’s harder for your enemies to
project force if they’re running backward.”
Mr. Pence
is also resisting the anti-corporate furies that are dominating Republican
politics today, arguing limited government means not intervening in the private
sector. He was one of the first major Republicans to criticize Mr. DeSantis for
his fight against Disney.
In the view
of New Right politicians such as Mr. DeSantis, limited-government conservatives
are naïve to the fact that liberals have overtaken major American institutions
— academia, Fortune 500 companies, the news media — and conservatives need to
use governmental power to fight back.
Mr. Pence
will run as a staunch social conservative, drawing a contrast with Mr. Trump on
abortion policy. In his town hall with CNN last week, Mr. Trump repeatedly
refused to say he would support a federal ban on abortion. He has said the
issue should be left to the states.
Mr. Pence
unapologetically endorses a national ban on abortion.
“For the
former president and others who aspire to the highest office in the land to
relegate that issue to states-only I think is wrong,” Mr. Pence said. His
senior adviser, Marc Short, said Mr. Pence regarded a 15-week national ban as a
“minimal threshold” and would support federal efforts to “protect life
beginning at conception.”
There is
little chance Mr. Pence will receive many endorsements from members of
Congress. His team insists that Mr. Pence does not need elected officials to
vouch for his credentials. Yet, it’s also unclear how many Republican donors
will back his bid. An early sign of interest came last week in Dallas when the
billionaire Ross Perot Jr., a real estate developer and son of the former
presidential candidate, hosted a lunch for Mr. Pence with other major donors,
according to two people with direct knowledge of the gathering.
Among the
hires for the super PAC supporting Mr. Pence is Bobby Saparow, who led the
ground game for Gov. Brian Kemp’s successful re-election campaign in Georgia in
2022, one of the few brights spots for Republicans in the midterms. Mr. Saparow
promised to “replicate” the effort with Mr. Pence.
For now,
Mr. Pence is signaling he’s willing to do without a staple of Republican
presidential campaigns in the modern era: Mr. Trump’s smash-mouth politics and
constant warfare against the media.
“People
want to see us get back to having a threshold of civility in the public
debate,” Mr. Pence said. “And when I say that, when I tell people that I think
democracy depends on heavy doses of civility, I get a very visceral response
from crowds.”
Jonathan
Swan is a political reporter who focuses on campaigns and Congress. As a
reporter for Axios, he won an Emmy Award for his 2020 interview of
then-President Donald J. Trump, and the White House Correspondents’
Association’s Aldo Beckman Award for “overall excellence in White House
coverage” in 2022. @jonathanvswan
Maggie
Haberman is a senior political correspondent and the author of “Confidence Man:
The Making of Donald Trump and the Breaking of America.” She was part of a team
that won a Pulitzer Prize in 2018 for reporting on President Trump’s advisers
and their connections to Russia. @maggieNYT
Shane
Goldmacher is a national political reporter and was previously the chief
political correspondent for the Metro desk. Before joining The Times, he worked
at Politico, where he covered national Republican politics and the 2016
presidential campaign. @ShaneGoldmacher


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