On the trail with Mike Pence: Putting out
fires lit by Trump
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[August 05, 2016]
By Doina Chiacu and Steve Holland
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - If Mike Pence had
any doubts about what life would be like on the 2016 Republican
presidential ticket with Donald Trump, the past week will have erased
them: He is the damage control guy.
The Indiana governor who swore off political mudslinging years ago heard
Trump call Democratic rival Hillary Clinton "the devil" and watched him
fan the flames of a feud with the parents of a Muslim soldier who died
saving U.S. troops in Iraq.
Unlike many vice presidential running mates, the mild-mannered Pence was
not tapped as the attack dog in the Nov. 8 presidential election. Trump
has that part down pat.
Pence's job is harder: softening Trump’s rough edges and limiting the
fallout from what many Republicans see as the nominee’s self-inflicted
wounds.
A week ago, for example, Pence rowed back on Trump's blacklist of some
media outlets, saying the campaign is discussing changing course.
Last Sunday, as Trump's dispute with the parents of slain U.S. Army
Captain Humayun Khan boiled over, Pence issued a statement praising the
soldier as an “American hero” and saying that his family “should be
cherished by every American.”

On Wednesday, Pence offered his own endorsement to House of
Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan, the top U.S. elected Republican,
after Trump infuriated many party leaders by declining to endorse Ryan
in his re-election bid.
Pence, who swore off negative campaigning after losing a vituperative
congressional race in 1990, eschews name calling. Trump, by contrast,
delights in using monikers such as "Crooked Hillary" and "the devil" to
describe Clinton.
Trump has made clear he values Pence, telling a rally on Thursday in
Portland, Maine, that he and his running mate have a "great
relationship."
But Pence must walk a fine line.
Even as he defuses Trump's verbal bombs, Pence must be careful to show
he knows who is boss. He also has to stick to his own principles while
not appearing to be trying to undermine the man who chose him as his No.
2.
Should Trump win, Pence, a former congressman, could serve as a conduit
to the U.S. Congress. But if Trump loses, Pence could emerge as a
possible White House contender for 2020.
Republican strategist Charlie Black said Pence has shown some political
deftness.
“He should have expected he would do some of this and provide more of
the even-tempered, articulate, measured responses,” Black said.
But Republican strategist Ryan Williams said Pence is in an “impossible
spot” and said that Trump’s missteps could cast a shadow over his
running mate's political future.
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Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump (R) and vice
presidential candidate Mike Pence speak in an overflow room at a
campaign event in Roanoke, Virginia, U.S. July 25, 2016.
REUTERS/Carlo Allegri/File Photo

“Mike Pence is a good Republican but unfortunately he will be
associated with the controversies that have ensnared the Trump-Pence
ticket and will be tied to whatever the consequences of this
election are,” Williams said.
POSITIVE PENCE, TESTY TRUMP
Trump's off-the-cuff insults and controversial proposals, such as a
temporary ban on Muslims entering the United States and a plan to
build a wall along the Mexican border to keep illegal immigrants
out, have made many in the party establishment uneasy.
The Republican nominee's feud with the Khan family made for an
awkward moment for Pence at a campaign event in Carson City, Nevada.
A military mother asked Pence how could he tolerate Trump's
disrespect for the armed forces, which prompted boos.
Pence admonished the crowd to tone it down. "Folks, that's what
freedom looks like and that's what freedom sounds like," he said
before calling Humayun Khan an American hero.
Pence was asked on Thursday by an 11-year-old boy at a North
Carolina rally if his role was "softening up" Trump's policies and
words.
Pence replied that he and Trump were "shoulder to shoulder" in the
campaign.

Christopher Devine, co-author of the book “The VP Advantage” and an
assistant political science professor at the University of Dayton in
Ohio, said that if Trump loses the November election, Pence may try
to position himself as a conservative bridge between Trump
supporters and traditional Republicans. That may be an added reason
for Pence’s cautious approach.
"He has to be very careful about how he handles the defense of
Donald Trump," Devine said.
(Editing by Caren Bohan and Leslie Adler)
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