With Trump ailing, a steady Pence tries to keep the campaign afloat
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[October 08, 2020]
By James Oliphant
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Mike Pence achieved
on the debate stage what arguably President Donald Trump did not in a
similar showdown last week: He offered a cogent and restrained case for
why traditional Republicans and some swing voters should return the
Trump-Pence ticket to the White House for four more years.
For Wednesday night's vice presidential square-off, Pence was charged
with trying to steady the ship after a tumultuous week in which the
president was hospitalized with the coronavirus and opinion polls showed
the Republican Trump's re-election bid against Democrat Joe Biden
slipping away.
But even if Pence had a strong night against Biden's running mate,
Kamala Harris, the reality is that Pence is not Trump, the candidate who
dominates TV screens and media coverage so completely that everyone in
his orbit becomes lost in shadow.
And there was nothing to suggest the vice president's debate performance
in Salt Lake City will help Trump with his biggest problem in the Nov. 3
election: women.
The televised clash felt weightier than in years past, with the
74-year-old Trump being treated for COVID-19. Biden, 77, has also faced
questions about his fitness for office should he win in November.
That made Pence and Harris more than campaign stand-ins. They were
dueling backup quarterbacks, ready to take the field at any time if
needed.
In the course of the 90-minute event, Pence reeled off a list of Trump
campaign priorities such as low taxes, a powerful military, a
conservative judiciary and an aggressive posture toward China – often
refusing to directly answer questions in favor of his prepared remarks.
It was a notable difference from the erratic and caustic performance
Trump himself turned in at a debate against Biden last week, one that
sent polls spiking further in Biden’s direction. The most recent
Reuters/Ipsos national poll showed Biden with a 12-point edge heading
into Wednesday’s debate.
Even so, Pence, like Trump, had no good answer when pressed for the
campaign's plan to cover people with pre-existing health conditions
should the Trump administration succeed in doing away with the Obamacare
health regime - a top concern of voters.
Harris, too, had her moments – and likely did nothing to damage Biden’s
prospects. On the biggest stage of her political career, the U.S.
senator was at ease and, at times, forceful.
Early on, when Pence was forced to defend his administration’s record on
the pandemic, Harris acted swiftly, branding Trump an incompetent
failure who had lied to the American public in remarks that quickly went
viral.
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Vice President Mike Pence speaks during the vice
presidential campaign debate with Democratic vice
presidential nominee Senator Kamala Harris held on the
campus of the University of Utah in Salt Lake City, Utah,
U.S., October 7, 2020. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
“Kamala took her pound of flesh on coronavirus like she needed to,
and Pence gave Republicans something to talk about for the next 28
days,” said Joel Payne, a Democratic strategist who worked for
Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign.
As much as it was her job as the vice presidential nominee to make
the case against Trump and Pence, she was also there to serve
another function: generate enthusiasm among the Democrats’ young,
progressive base who may view Biden as a relic of an outdated
political era. She made history just by being on the stage as the
first Black woman and Asian-American on a major presidential ticket.
“Her role was to be an excitement machine. Pence’s role was to
consolidate the base. And they probably both did themselves some
favors in that regard,” Payne said.
Matt Gorman, a Republican strategist who worked for Jeb Bush’s 2016
presidential campaign, said Harris stumbled when she refused to
answer whether she and Biden supported adding new justices to the
U.S. Supreme Court to balance it ideologically.
Harris, he said, “can throw big punches. But she can also get
knocked down.”
Still, the Trump-Pence ticket was the one that needed the biggest
boost and to make up lost ground with swing voters, particularly
women.
Pence may not have helped himself by regularly interrupting Harris,
who implored him to let her finish her answers, as well as the
moderator, Susan Page. A flash CNN poll found that women viewers
overwhelmingly thought Harris won the debate over Pence.
In that way, Pence was more like Trump than it looked.
(Reporting by James Oliphant; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Howard
Goller)
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