Ex-US Vice President Mike Pence launches 2024 election bid, challenging
Trump
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[June 07, 2023]
By Tim Reid
(Reuters) -Former Vice President Mike Pence, who served Donald Trump
with unwavering loyalty but later turned on him after the 2021 attack on
the U.S. Capitol, formally challenged his former boss for the Republican
presidential nomination on Wednesday.
"I'll always be proud of the progress we made together for a stronger
and more prosperous America," Pence said in his campaign video,
criticizing current Democratic President Joe Biden but never citing
Trump by name.
It is extremely rare for a vice president to run against a president he
served under, and it has happened just a handful of times in U.S.
history. Pence enters the Republican presidential primary with a
mountain to climb, polling at just 5% and trailing Trump by 44 points,
according to a Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll in May.
Pence, who turns 64 on Wednesday, will face Trump and at least 10 others
in a crowded Republican field that is essentially a two-man race between
Trump and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis.
Pence will hold a campaign kick-off event later on Wednesday near Des
Moines, Iowa's capital followed by a CNN town hall event Wednesday
evening. Pence's campaign declared his candidacy to the Federal Election
Commission on Monday.
Pence, a conservative Christian, will focus much of his campaigning on
Iowa, the first state to vote in the nominating contest next year. Iowa
has a significant number of evangelical voters among its Republican
electorate. Pence hopes a strong showing in the state will give him
momentum and propel him into contention.
During Trump's tumultuous four years in the White House, Pence
repeatedly defended him through multiple scandals.
But Pence incurred the wrath of Trump and his supporters when, as
ceremonial president of the Senate, he refused to stop the certification
of Biden's victory over Trump in the 2020 election.
Pence said he had no constitutional authority to meddle with the
election results. Trump supporters stormed the Capitol during the
certification process on Jan. 6, 2021, forcing Pence, lawmakers and
staff to flee to safety.
"I had no right to overturn the election, and his reckless words
endangered my family and everyone at the Capitol that day, and I know
that history will hold Donald Trump accountable," Pence said in March.
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Former U.S. Vice President Mike Pence
addresses the National Review Institute's 2023 Ideas Summit in
Washington, U.S., March 31, 2023. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
In Tweets during the certification, Trump accused Pence of
cowardice. Some rioters chanted for Pence to be hanged.
"I like Mike Pence very much. He's a very fine man. He's a very nice
man. He made a mistake," Trump told a CNN town hall last month.
Representatives for Trump's campaign could not be immediately
reached for comment on Wednesday.
Many of Trump's diehard supporters view Pence's refusal to overturn
the election result as treachery, potentially complicating his path
to the nomination.
Pence, who served as a governor of Indiana and is a former
congressman, still embraces many of Trump's policies while
portraying himself as an even-keeled and consensus-oriented
alternative.
The success of his campaign will hinge on whether he can attract
enough backers of Trump's policies who are turned off by the former
president's rhetoric and behavior to build a viable coalition.
Pence in his video cited inflation, immigration and recession risk.
He also said, over images of the leaders of Russia and China, that
"the enemies of freedom are on the march around the world".
"Worse still, timeless American values are under assault as never
before," he added over video naming culture war issues such as
transgender Americans and drag queens.
He did not mention the topic of abortion but did cite efforts to
"give America a new beginning for life".
(Reporting by Tim Reid; additional reporting by Susan Heavey;
editing by Ross Colvin, Grant McCool and Angus MacSwan)
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