Mike Pence Urges Conservatives to Look Forward as a Trump Cloud Hovers

Mr. Pence, speaking in Washington hours before Donald Trump was set to do the same, tried to draw distinctions with the former president after a week of revelations related to Jan. 6, 2021.

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This article is part of our Midterms 2022 Daily Briefing

Mike Pence Urges Conservatives to Look Forward as a Trump Cloud Hovers | INFBusiness.com

Speaking before a gathering of young conservatives in Washington on Tuesday, former Vice President Mike Pence said that “some people may choose to focus on the past, but elections are about the future.”

WASHINGTON — Red-and-blue spotlights flashed from the ceiling as former Vice President Mike Pence walked onstage. Anthemic music pumped from the hotel ballroom speakers surrounding him. A few audience members lifted cellphones to snap pictures.

But the festive hues and heavy bass couldn’t distract from the fact that, for many Republicans, the life of the party was just down the street in the nation’s capital, where preparations were underway for former President Donald J. Trump’s speech later in the day.

One of the most uncomfortable splits inside the Republican Party was on clear display on Tuesday as the two-time running mates — and potential rivals on the 2024 presidential campaign trail — were set to offer competing visions for the country from two Marriott hotels separated by less than a mile in downtown Washington.

Mr. Pence went first, giving a speech on Tuesday morning that left out the kind of effusive praise for Mr. Trump that he had regularly injected into his addresses as vice president. Instead, he drew subtle distinctions between Mr. Trump’s fixation on the 2020 election and his own preference to fight the next political battles.

“Some people may choose to focus on the past, but elections are about the future,” Mr. Pence said.

He made only passing reference to Jan. 6, 2021, as a “tragic day,” days after the House committee investigating the Capitol riot had detailed Mr. Trump’s refusal to call off the violence on Jan. 6, 2021, and the fear that members of Mr. Pence’s Secret Service detail felt for their lives.

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The hearing prompted scathing editorials from two newspapers controlled by the Murdoch family: The New York Post said the revelations showed that Mr. Trump was “unworthy” to be president again, while The Wall Street Journal opined that Mr. Trump had “utterly failed” 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.

In his speech, Mr. Pence repeatedly referred to the “Trump-Pence” administration’s accomplishments as he 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.”

Mr. Pence celebrated the Supreme Court’s recent ruling eliminating the federal right to abortion, noting that the decision had been made possible because of three justices “appointed by the Trump-Pence administration.”

“We save the babies, we’ll save America,” he said.

A mild-mannered former governor of Indiana, Mr. Pence described himself as focused on the future and eager to tell President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia things he “didn’t want to hear.”

But he couldn’t escape the direct contrast with Mr. Trump. When Mr. Pence finished his speech, the first question from the audience of young conservatives at a Young America’s Foundation conference was about Mr. Trump “and the divide between the two of you.”

“I don’t know that our movement is that divided — I don’t know that the president and I differ on issues, but we may differ on focus,” Mr. Pence said.

The two men’s paths have also differed this year along the midterm campaign trail, as they have backed opposing candidates in several primary races, including the Republican governor’s contest in Arizona, which will be decided next week.

Mr. Pence is widely seen as considering a presidential bid in 2024, but he would face stiff challenges.

In a New York Times/Siena College poll of Republican voters this month, just 6 percent said they would vote for Mr. Pence if the 2024 Republican presidential primary were held today, compared with 49 percent for Mr. Trump and 25 percent for Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida.

Source: nytimes.com

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