Archive for the ‘Mike Pence’ Category

Mike Pence and Mike Pompeo belong to a doomsday cult — and …

Mike Pence and Mike Pompeo belong to a doomsday cult -- and may be trying to bring on the apocalypse (function(){ var zergnet = document.createElement('script'); zergnet.type = 'text/javascript'; zergnet.async = true; zergnet.src = (document.location.protocol == 'https:' ? 'https:' : 'http:') + '//www.zergnet.com/zerg.js?id=63310'; var znscr = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0]; znscr.parentNode.insertBefore(zergnet, znscr) })(); "+"ipt>";var zergnet_below_content_code = "(function(){ var zergnet = document.createElement('script'); zergnet.type = 'text/javascript'; zergnet.async = true; zergnet.src = (document.location.protocol == 'https:' ? 'https:' : 'http:') + '//www.zergnet.com/zerg.js?id=65997'; var znscr = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0]; znscr.parentNode.insertBefore(zergnet, znscr) })(); "+"ipt>";var survey_code = "";var connatix_in_content_code = '';var ora_below_content_code = "";//console.log( "lazy load connatix in content" ); jQuery('#story-page-embedded-after2-ad').html( connatix_in_content_code );//console.log( "lazy load ora below content" ); jQuery('#oratv-desktop-container').html( ora_below_content_code );console.log( "lazy load zergnet below_content" );jQuery('#zergnet-below-content-ll-target').html( zergnet_below_content_code );console.log( "lazy load zergnet sidebar" );jQuery('#zergnet_lazy_target').html( zergnet_sidebar_code );console.log( "lazy load below content survey" );jQuery('#below-comment-survey').html( survey_code);}); Google+

See original here:
Mike Pence and Mike Pompeo belong to a doomsday cult -- and ...

Mike Pence Struggles To Defend Trump’s Lie That Past Presidents Support …

Vice President Mike Pence on Tuesday struggled to back President Donald Trumps lie that former presidents have affirmed their support for his proposed border wall, claiming that Trump meant that they support border security.

On Friday, Trump falsely boasted that his predecessors have told me that we should have built the wall.

This should have been done by all of the presidents that preceded me, and they all know it, he said during a news conference. Some of them have told me that we should have done it.

But all four living former presidents have denied that they ever spoke to Trump about the wall or have made it clear they do not support Trumps long-promised proposal.

Pressed by NBC News Hallie Jackson in an interview Tuesday, Pence hesitated, before attempting to claim that the president meant that it had been his impression and that he meant the importance of border security.

I know the president has said that that was his impression from previous administrations, previous presidents, Pence said. I know Ive seen clips of previous presidents talking about the importance of border security, the importance of addressing the issue of illegal immigration.

None of the living former presidents has explicitly stated any support for the wall itself, contrary to Trumps brag on Friday.

The vice presidents attempted defense was similar to a statement from an administration official to The New York Times on Monday, in response to all of Trumps living predecessors contradicting Trumps false claim.

The official said that Trump might have been referring to public comments made by previous presidents on behalf of border security, though not the wall specifically or directly to Mr. Trump, The Times reported.

Pence gave several interviews Tuesday morning attempting to bolster Trump ahead of the presidentsprimetime address on the border wall.

He similarly struggled to defend Trumps repeated lies about immigration and the border, including the false claim about the former presidents, in an interview with ABC News reporter Jonathan Karl.

How can the president be, how can his word be trusted on this, when he has said so many things that are just not true about this crisis? Karl asked.

Pence deflected by saying that the American people arent as concerned about the political debate.

This story has been updated with more comments from Pence.

Continue reading here:
Mike Pence Struggles To Defend Trump's Lie That Past Presidents Support ...

Vice President Mike Pence and the Government Shutdown – The Atlantic

Read: Will the government ever reopen?

The president underscored the futility of Sundays confab before it even took place: I dont expect to have anything happen at that meeting, he told reporters that morning, before heading to Camp David. Ultimately, its going to be solved by the principals.

In other words, Pence entered the talks under no illusion that progress lay waiting. The result was that Pences negotiating partners saw him as a man sidelined, a status that has increasingly defined the vice presidents tenure, according to interviews with lawmakers, aides, and current and former administration officials, many of whom requested anonymity in order to speak frankly and reveal confidential details.

Read: Mike Pences talent for being absent

In Sundays meeting, for example, Democratic staffers made clear that they would not negotiate border-wall funding until the government reopens, maintaining the position House Speaker Nancy Pelosi had staked out days before. According to two congressional staffers in the room, Pence responded by discussing funding for border-security items both parties might agree upon, such as drone technology. For Pence, the sources said, it appeared an attempt to maintain a smooth and congenial discussion. Nevertheless, with regard to the sticking point$5.7 billion for a wallboth parties remained dug in. I wish hed been a bit more forceful, lamented one Republican aide who was in the room.

Pence has never been an outwardly aggressive negotiator on behalf of the president, preferring to project a calm, respectful, and reasonable demeanor to contrast Donald Trumps bombast. Its a posture that most lawmakers and aides I spoke to appreciated, praising Pence as a valuable sounding board for their frustrations with the White House, notably at Senate Republicans weekly policy lunches, which he attends frequently. Yet when it comes to reaching a deal with Democrats to reopen the government, it has mattered almost none: On Monday, day 17 of the partial government shutdown, the White House announced its most serious threat yet to declare a national state of emergency over what it claims is a crisis at the U.S.-Mexico border.

Pence signaled his readiness to abandon talks with Democrats in favor of this move, telling reporters on Monday that the border represents a humanitarian and national-security crisis.

Hes investing in GOP solidarity, a senior aide to a GOP member close to Pence told me, not deal making with Democrats.

Should the administration declare a state of emergency, Pences reputation as a mediator between the White House and Congress would likely take a hit. Such a declaration would symbolize the administrations failure not only to pick off Democrats, but also to maintain the total support of its own party: In the past week, moderate Senate Republicans such as Susan Collins of Maine, Cory Gardner of Colorado, and Thom Tillis of North Carolina said they were prepared to back the governments reopening with or without wall funding.

See more here:
Vice President Mike Pence and the Government Shutdown - The Atlantic

Mike Pence Says Trump Won’t Budge: ‘No Wall, No Deal’

Vice President Mike Pence said Thursday night that the Trump administration had no plans to back down from its demand for $5.6 billion in funding for a border wall, even if it means keeping the government partially closed.

The president has made it very clear: No wall, no deal, Pence told Fox News personality Tucker Carlson. Were here to make a deal, but its a deal thats going to result in achieving real gains on border security, and you have no border security without a wall. We will have no deal without a wall.

The partial government shutdown, which began shortly before Christmas, is stretching into its third week with no end in sight. House Democrats under the leadership of newly elected Speaker Nancy Pelosi (Calif.), passed legislation meant to reopen closed agencies, but those efforts have already been deemed dead on arrival by Republican leaders. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (Ky.) has said he would block any bill without first obtaining President Donald Trumps approval, and Trump has refused to back down from his demand that a government spending bill include the $5.6 billion for the wall.

Pence on Thursday repeatedly said the White House was willing to negotiate with the Democrats to sort out some kind of compromise, although he said there would be no deal without funding for some sort of barrier along the Mexico border.

We really are prepared to negotiate, were prepared to talk, were prepared to listen, the vice president said. I want the American people to know that this is a real crisis at our border, and we made progress last year.

Congressional leaders from both parties are expected to meet with Trump at the White House again on Friday.

Some GOP senators began to break with their party on Thursday, however, and urged McConnell to consider compromising on legislation even if Trump didnt get immediate funding for border security. Sen. Cory Gardner (R-Colo.) told The Hill that the chamber should pass a continuing resolution, a stop-gap funding measure, to get the government back open.

We can pass legislation that has the appropriations number in it while we continue to get more, but we should continue to do our jobs and get the government open, he told the outlet.

Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) also said Thursday she would support a proposal to separate homeland security funding from other funding bills in order to reopen most of the government agencies that have been affected.

Read the rest here:
Mike Pence Says Trump Won't Budge: 'No Wall, No Deal'

Why All Those Photos of Mike Pence Swearing In … – time.com

On Thursday, as a new year began and with it a new Congress, Vice President Mike Pence swore in the Senates newly elected and re-elected members on the Senate floor. The event is typically a happy occasion that victorious candidates share with their families, a capstone to what is often a grueling campaign season away from home.

But the celebratory photos that circulate after the fact arent the real deal, and theres a reason for that: Aside from one official photograph each year, photography has been formally banned in the Senate Chamber since the 1950s.

Instead, after Pence officiates the oath of office in the Senate chamber, newly inducted Senators can move to the Old Senate Chamber and do it all over again alongside their families. (Meanwhile, in the much larger House of Representatives, a new Congress is marked by Members taking the oath of office as a group; though that moment has been photographed, the House Speaker may also do individual reenactments as photo-ops for Members.)

Daniel Holt, an assistant Senate historian, tells TIME that the tradition of repeating the oath just for show dates back to as early as the 1930s, when Franklin D. Roosevelts Vice President, John Nance Garner, reenacted oaths in his ceremonial office for the widow of Huey Long, Rose McConnell Long, who briefly became a Louisiana Senator after her husband died, and for New Jersey Sen. William Smathers and Florida Sen. Claude Pepper in the 1930s.

In the 1970s, Vice Presidents began reenacting the oaths with more regularity for the families of newly elected Senators who wanted to be closer to the action, as civilians are generally not permitted on the Senate floor and have to watch from the gallery. After the Old Senate Chamber reopened for tourists in 1976, Vice President Walter Mondale moved the reenactments there in 1981, Holt explains.

From then on it became more of an ingrained tradition, Holt said.

The ceremonial reenactments have become a bigger deal with the advancement of photography. People want keepsakes to remember special occasions by.

This wasnt a huge problem before the 1950s when you didnt have high-speed film and handheld cameras, Holt says.

In fact, Senators have gotten in trouble for using their phones to take photographs and videos on the floor in recent years. On Dec. 20, outgoing Sen. Claire McCaskill was reprimanded for posting a video of the floor while the Senate was not in session. And Im out, the caption read.

United States Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnells office proceeded to file a complaint with the Senate Sergeant at Arms, which enforces the Senate rules. McCaskill had broken Rule IV, which stipulates that taking of pictures of any kind is prohibited in the Senate Chamber, the Senate Reading Rooms (Marble Room and Lobby), the Senate Cloakrooms, and the Private Dining Room of the Senate.

Reenacting the oaths in the Old Senate Chamber gives Senators a way around Rule IV so they can have precious moments like the one shared by Sen. Chris Murphy and his son Rider in 2013, when the 1-year-old made headlines for raising his hand alongside his father.

Rider Murphy raises his hand just like his father, U.S. Sen. Chris Murphy (D-CT) (L) as he participates in a reenacted swearing-in with his wife Catherine Murphy and U.S. Vice President Joe Biden in the Old Senate Chamber at the U.S. Capitol January 3, 2013

Chip SomodevillaGetty Images

I dont think Vice President [Joe] Biden expected to also swear in my son Rider that day, the Democrat from Connecticut told TIME. Being able to share that moment with my wife and kids meant the world to me and it gave us one of our favorite family photos.

Write to Abby Vesoulis at abby.vesoulis@time.com.

More:
Why All Those Photos of Mike Pence Swearing In ... - time.com