If You are a regular reader of this Blog, You KNOW..I detest President Donald Trump...You KNOW I'd like nothing better than him to be impeached....to resign or to be indicted for some high crime...None of which I have any real hope of happening...But say one of those scenarios did happen?
The question is...Would we be any better off with Vice President Pence as the President...Is he really the lesser of two evils or is he just evil??
Well.. Vice President Mike Pence, who has dutifully stood by the President, mustering a devotional gaze rarely seen since the days of Nancy Reagan, serves as a daily reminder that the Constitution offers an alternative to Trump. The worse the President looks, the more desirable his understudy seems. The more Trump is mired in scandal, the more likely Pence’s elevation to the Oval Office becomes, unless he ends up legally entangled as well.
Vice President Pence’s odds of becoming
President are long but not prohibitive. Of his forty-seven predecessors,
nine eventually assumed the Presidency, because of a death or a
resignation. After Lyndon Johnson decided to join the ticket with John
F. Kennedy, he calculated his odds of ascension to be approximately one
in four, and is said to have told Clare Boothe Luce, “I’m a gambling
man, darling, and this is the only chance I’ve got.”
If
the job is a gamble for Mke Pence, he himself is something of a gamble for
the country. During the tumultuous 2016 Presidential campaign,
relatively little attention was paid to how Pence was chosen, or to his
political record. And, with all the infighting in the new
Administration, few have focussed on Pence’s power within the White
House.
Newt Gingrich said recently that the three people with the most policy influence
in the Administration are Donald Trump, Chief of Staff John Kelly, and Mike Pence. Newt
Gingrich went on, “Others have some influence, such as Jared Kushner and
Gary Cohn. But look at the schedule. Pence has lunches with the
President. He’s in the national-security briefings.”
Moreover, and
crucially,Mike Pence is the only official in the White House who can’t be
fired.
Mike Pence,, is also one of the few with whom Donald Trump hasn’t overtly feuded.
“The President considers him one of his best decisions,” Tony Fabrizio,
a pollster for Trump, told me. Even so, they are almost comically
mismatched. “You end up with an odd pair of throwbacks from fifties
casting,” the former White House strategist Stephen Bannon joked,
comparing them to Dean Martin, the bad boy of the Rat Pack, and “Ward Cleaver, the dad
on ‘Leave It to Beaver.’ ”
Trump and Pence are
misaligned politically, too. Trump campaigned as an unorthodox
outsider, but Pence is a doctrinaire ideologue. Kellyanne Conway, the
White House counsellor, who became a pollster for Pence in 2009,
describes him as “a full-spectrum conservative” on social, moral,
economic, and defense issues. Pence leans so far to the right that he
has occasionally echoed A.C.L.U. arguments against government overreach;
he has, for instance, supported a federal shield law that would protect
journalists from having to identify whistle-blowers. According to
Bannon, Pence is “the outreach guy, the connective tissue” between the
Trump Administration and the most conservative wing of the Republican
establishment. “Trump’s got the populist nationalists,” Bannon said.
“But Pence is the base. Without Pence, you don’t win.”
But Pence has the political experience, the connections, the discipline, and the ideological mooring that Trump lacks. He also has a close relationship with the conservative billionaire donors who have captured the Republican Party’s agenda in recent years.
II-
During the 2016 campaign, Trump characterized the Republican Party’s big spenders as “highly sophisticated killers” whose donations allowed them to control politicians.
When he declared his candidacy, he claimed that, because of his real-estate fortune, he did not need support from “rich donors,” and he denounced super pacs, their depositories of unlimited campaign contributions, as “corrupt.”
Mike Pence’s political career, though, has been sponsored at almost every turn by the donors whom Trump has assailed. Mike Pence is the inside man of the conservative money machine.
On Election
Night, the dissonance between Trump’s populist supporters and Pence’s
billionaire sponsors was quietly evident. When Trump gave his acceptance
speech, in the ballroom of the Hilton Hotel in midtown Manhattan, he
vowed to serve “the forgotten men and women of our country,” and
promised to “rebuild our highways, bridges, tunnels, airports, schools,
and hospitals.”
Upstairs, in a room reserved for Party élites, several
of the richest and most conservative donors, all of whom support drastic
reductions in government spending, were celebrating. Doug Deason, a
Texas businessman and a
political donor, recalled, “It was amazing. In the V.I.P.
reception area, there was an even more V.I.P. room, and I counted at
least eight or nine billionaires.”
Among the billionaires who gathered in the room at the Hilton, Deason recalled, were the financier Wilbur Ross, whom Trump later appointed his Secretary of Commerce; the corporate investor Carl Icahn, who became a top adviser to Trump but resigned eight months later, when allegations of financial impropriety were published by The New Yorker; Harold Hamm, the founder and chairman of Continental Resources, an Oklahoma-based oil-and-gas company that has made billions of dollars through fracking; and David Koch, the richest resident of New York City.
Koch’s presence was especially unexpected. He and his brother Charles
are libertarians who object to most government spending, including
investments in infrastructure. They co-own virtually all of Koch
Industries, the second-largest private company in the United States, and
have long tapped their combined fortune—currently ninety billion
dollars—to finance candidates, think tanks, pressure groups, and
political operatives who support an anti-tax and anti-regulatory agenda,
which dovetails with their financial interests.
During
the campaign, Trump said that Republican rivals who attended secretive
donor summits sponsored by the Kochs were “puppets.” The Kochs, along
with several hundred allied donors, had amassed nearly nine hundred
million dollars to spend on the Presidential election, but declined to
support Trump’s candidacy. At one point, Charles Koch described the
choice between Trump and Hillary Clinton as one between “cancer or heart
attack.”
Marc Short, the head of legislative
affairs in the Trump White House, credits Pence for the Kochs’
rapprochement with Trump. “The Kochs were very excited about the
Vice-Presidential pick,” Short told me. “There are areas where they
differ from the Administration, but now there are many areas they’re
partnering with us on.” Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, a Democrat from
Rhode Island, who has accused the Kochs of buying undue influence,
particularly on environmental policy—Koch Industries has a long history
of pollution—is less enthusiastic about their alliance with Pence. “If
Pence were to become President for any reason, the government would be
run by the Koch brothers—period. He’s been their tool for years,” he
said. Bannon is equally alarmed at the prospect of a Pence Presidency.
He said recently,
“I’m concerned he’d be a President that the Kochs would
own.”
The solution is a complete overhaul.. Get Trump ,Pence and everybody associated with them out of Washington...
Bring in Democrats, Progressives and Liberals...Take back this country from the right wing lunatic fringe...and that includes...Mike Pence!
3 comments:
WOW! Keith, This is the most you've written in a long while...All Good Stuff!
On Point as usual! My first time commenting on your blog...Will not be the last!
Spot On Good Brother!
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