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Gov. Mike DeWine to appear with ex-Vice President Mike Pence in Ohio later this week – cleveland.com

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Gov. Mike DeWine will appear with Ex-Vice President Mike Pence in Ohio later this week at an event promoting the states oil and natural gas industry.

Pence and DeWine are taking part in a Thursday roundtable in Cincinnati hosted by the Ohio Oil and Gas Energy Education Program, a public outreach arm of the industry, discussing the importance of domestically produced fossil fuels, according to event organizers. The talk, coordinated through a new political group Pence founded, wont be open to the public.

While in Ohio, a Pence aide said the former vice president also will appear at private campaign fundraisers for DeWine and Rep. Steve Chabot, a Cincinnati Republican who was drawn into a Democratic-leaning district following redistricting earlier this year.

The timing is eyebrow-raising, given the featured role Pence is playing in this weeks congressional hearings investigating the causes of the riot at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. The committee plans a hearing to examine the steps ex-President Donald Trump took to pressure Pence to unilaterally reject the results of the November 2020 election, and Pences insistence that he had no right to do so.

The appearance in Ohio also is the latest sign that Pence is trying to stay politically relevant in an electorally significant state. Pence has sent signals he may run for president in 2024, telling the New York Times last month he may do so even if Trump decides to run for another term himself.

Pence has emerged as something of an unlikely rival to Trump, who has broken with Pence over the former vice-presidents refusal to embrace Trumps false claims about the 2020 presidential election. Hes also scheduled to appear this week in Arizona to talk about border security, and campaigned in Georgias Republican primary last month, stumping for incumbent Gov. Brian Kemp as he fended off a Trump-backed challenger.

Pence, a former Indiana governor, was last in Ohio in late October, when he made a campaign-style trio of appearances a few days before the Nov. 2 special election.

On Oct. 29, Pence spoke at the conservative Ashbrook Center at Ashland University. The next day, he stumped for Republican Rep. Mike Carey shortly before Carey ended up winning the election, and spoke at a conservative evangelical church in suburban Columbus.

Pence previously spoke at an Ohio Oil & Gas Association event in 2019, while he was still vice-president. He and DeWine were in frequent contact in 2020, when Pence coordinated the Trump administrations coronavirus response with state governors.

In a statement, Tricia McLaughlin, a DeWine campaign spokesperson, said the event will give the governor a chance to talk about the current record-high gas prices, laying the blame at President Joe Biden.

Gov. DeWine looks forward to joining former Vice President Pence to discuss real solutions to give Ohioans much-needed gas-price relief, McLaughlin said.

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Gov. Mike DeWine to appear with ex-Vice President Mike Pence in Ohio later this week - cleveland.com

Talk of the County reader opinion: ‘I can’t believe I’m saying this, but thank God for Mike Pence’ – Chicago Tribune

Editors note

Talk of the County is a reader-generated column of opinions. If you see something you disagree with or think is incorrect, please tell us. Call us at 312-222-4554 or emailtalkofthecounty@tribpub.com.

Wake up America

I cant believe Im saying this, but thank God for Mike Pence.One of the few in the GOP who actually stood up for democracy on Jan. 6, 2021.He, not Trump and his millions of lemminglike minions, was a true patriot and showed tremendous courage in standing up to those who wanted to overturn a fairly won election.Wake up America, see things as they are, and not how Trump and Fox News want you to see them.

Rattling my windows

Overall, code enforcement is a great thing to help beautify the town.The focus should really be on significant abusers.Trash in yards, broken windows, dilapidated structures.However, what is a weed to one person is not to another. I frown upon the use of herbicides to control my lawn weeds, and I have moved toward planting gardens which are full of native wildflowers.These are a proven benefit to native birds and insects.Now I fear Ill be fined because Im trying to be environmentally conscious. How about also going after speeders, those with fully tinted windows, and booming bass music which rattles my house multiple times at night.

Long line

Waited 90 minutes in line to pay taxes today. No senior line. No handicap line. Thanks, Lake County.

What a statesman

To the incredibly informed reader who was waxing poetic about recalling $2 gallons of gas under the Trump administration: I actually remember 99 cent gallons of gas under the Trump administration. I also remember why there were 99 cent gallons of gas.I think it was a fool downplaying coronavirus who wanted to blame a foreign country for its spread vs taking action to protect the citizens of this country.I also remember bleach being suggested by said fool for treating the virus in the human body. Another thing I remember was someone who didnt care, and still doesnt care, about American democracy, and wanting to reverse election results based on zero evidence.What a statesman he was, and still is.

We are all flawed

A Republican friend visited from Florida and said Trump was the lesser of two evils when it came to Biden. A relative who is a Democrat always says Biden was the lesser of two evils. Neither would ever consider crossing party lines when it comes to voting. Funny how both parties think theyre right about everything, when in fact no one has all the answers. More reason to get rid of party lines. No one is a perfect choice. We are all flawed. We have lost any sense of working together with compromise. Good grief, what happened to us?

Something seriously wrong

There is something seriously wrong with Ann Taylors city of Waukegan administration regarding her special event planning and permitting processes. Waukegan residents do not have a farmers market again this year due to Taylors cumbersome process, poor planning and execution, while neighboring municipalitiesmanage to pull this off year after year. Taylor needs to place a higher priority on streamlining her special events planning and permitting processes and working more effectively with community boosters such as Main Street, the Chamber of Commerces, local businesses, community action groups, and residents so Waukegan can be a place that can successfully host special events insteadof continuing on with cumbersome processes that are clearly not working.

We should never forget

First, I would like see them limitthe terms ofall of these politicians.We need changes.Next, it would be nice to see them make limits on the money spent for people running for officeThis would give the little guy a chance.Next, I would like to see a list of all politicians not voting for the gunlaws, that are important.Nothing changes no matter how many children are killed.Do you think it would make a difference if some of these politicians had their childkilled in these massschool shootings?Would they make sure certain laws got changed?After each mass shooting, within months it is forgotten about until the next one. We should never forget.

Long overdue

Its high time Waukegan got some professionalism in government. Mayor Taylor won her election campaigning for a Waukegan city administrator. Aldermen Bolton, Kirkwood, Moisio, Newsome and Seger voted against it. What are they afraid of? That theyll actually be held accountable for their actions? That theyll actually have to do their jobs with their feet held to the fire? That theyll get caught? All their talk about the need for a referendum is a smoke screen to allow them to keep doing their business as usual without any oversight. Lets support Mayor Taylor and her work to improve Waukegan. Its long overdue.

Changes are coming

I dont understand these soft-on-crime, lefty liberals that pose as prosecutors and mayors. They support low or no bail laws that keep criminals on the streets. If they think its their job to keep people out of jail, why are they not public defenders or members of some ACLU-funded front group? Well, it was good to see that even in the peoples republic of San Francisco, they have a bit of sense to kick out their radical district attorney. Changes are coming and Democrats are going to have a hard time getting elected dogcatcher.

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Talk of the County reader opinion: 'I can't believe I'm saying this, but thank God for Mike Pence' - Chicago Tribune

Jan. 6 Panel Hints at Fresh Revelations as Hearing Is Delayed – The New York Times

WASHINGTON A day after the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, Eric Herschmann, a White House lawyer, received an unexpected call from the conservative lawyer John Eastman, who had been working with President Donald J. Trump to try to overturn the results of the 2020 election.

To Mr. Herschmanns surprise even after the deadly riot Mr. Eastman was still pushing to fight the election results, an effort that resulted in mayhem and violence.

Mr. Herschmann cut him off.

Im going to give you the best free legal advice youre ever getting in your life, he recalled telling Mr. Eastman before recommending he find a criminal defense lawyer, adding, Youre going to need it.

The House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol released video of Mr. Herschmanns testimony as it previewed a hearing Thursday in which the panel plans to delve into the pressure campaign Mr. Trump and Mr. Eastman waged against Vice President Mike Pence as they tried to persuade him to throw out legitimate electoral votes for Joseph R. Biden Jr. to keep Mr. Trump in power.

President Trump had no factual basis for what he was doing, and he had been told it was illegal, Representative Liz Cheney, Republican of Wyoming and the vice chairwoman of the committee, said in a video previewing the hearing.

Thursdays hearing is expected to include potentially important revelations about the steps Mr. Trump and his allies took to try to compel his vice president to overturn the election.

J. Michael Luttig, a conservative former judge who advised the vice president, is scheduled to testify. Judge Luttig advised Mr. Pence that Mr. Trumps idea that the vice president could unilaterally decide to invalidate election results was unconstitutional and that he should not go along with the plan.

Also scheduled to appear is Greg Jacob, Mr. Pences top White House lawyer, who has provided the committee with crucial evidence about the role played by Mr. Eastman, who wrote a memo that members of both parties have described as a blueprint for a coup.

Mr. Eastman advised Mr. Trump that Mr. Pence could throw out electoral votes from states he had lost, though he conceded during a conversation with Mr. Jacob that his arguments carried no legal weight and would fail before the Supreme Court.

As the mob attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6 some of them chanting Hang Mike Pence! Mr. Jacob sent an email to Mr. Eastman blaming him for the violence.

Thanks to your bullshit, we are now under siege, Mr. Jacob wrote at 12:14 p.m.

It was gravely, gravely irresponsible for you to entice the president with an academic theory that had no legal viability, Mr. Jacob wrote in a subsequent email to Mr. Eastman.

The committee could also hear testimony about Mr. Trumps state of mind during the violence.

Ms. Cheney said last week that the panel had received testimony that when Mr. Trump learned of the mobs threats to hang Mr. Pence, he said, Maybe our supporters have the right idea, and added that Mr. Pence deserves it.

The committee could also hear testimony that a day before the mob violence, Mr. Pences chief of staff, Marc Short, grew so concerned about Mr. Trumps actions that he presented a warning to a Secret Service agent: The president was going to publicly turn against the vice president, and there could be a security risk to Mr. Pence because of it.

The committee on Tuesday postponed a hearing that was scheduled for Wednesday to lay out its findings about Mr. Trumps attempt to use the Justice Department to overturn the 2020 election.

Its just technical issues, said Representative Zoe Lofgren, Democrat of California and a member of the committee. She said that for staff aides who were compiling a series of videos to be showcased at the session, it was overwhelming, so were trying to give them a little room.

Maggie Haberman contributed reporting.

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Jan. 6 Panel Hints at Fresh Revelations as Hearing Is Delayed - The New York Times

From clear scripts to big-name casting, the Jan. 6 hearings meet the standards of must-see TV – Salon

Among the factors leading to "Lost" and "Desperate Housewives" becoming the talked-about dramas of their debut season, as in 2004-2005, was their novel usage of bodies and questions in their respective premieres. "Lost" opens with wide shots of bodies scattered on a beach amidst a plane crash's wreckage. "Desperate Housewives" shocks with just one, that of the omniscient narrator who dies by suicide without warning.

Each show could have rolled along as straightforward relationship-driven dramas from there, save for the questions ending each pilot: "Oh Mary Alice, what did you do?" "Guys . . . where are we?" These simple queries establish there's something bigger going on than any individual character's story arc or their conflicts a potential threat that supersedes individual problems.

I can almost guarantee that nobody on the congressional committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection thought about either of these shows or the many subsequent series influenced by them when they laid the groundwork for their televised hearings.

Scratch that I'm positive of that, given the straightforward presentation witnessed by more than 20 million prime-time viewers on Thursday, June 9. None of the committee members made extra efforts to play to the cameras, and at times its chairman, Representative Bennie Thompson, D-Ms., stumbled when reading his lines from the teleprompter.

The unspoken understanding, at least among viewers watching in good faith, should be that none of these people were elected based on their acting ability. But the committee does understand how potent a tease, cliffhanger, and "coming up this season" montage can be to persuade a skeptical viewer to stick with the story. Rather, the man producing these televised hearings, former ABC News president James Goldston, understands this.

RELATED: Jan. 6 committee: Pointless spectacle

This approach is necessary given the grave danger the Jan. 6 insurrection represents and its relationship to a slow-moving, ongoing coup. Our entertainment landscape is awash with alternatives more exciting than a stodgy congressional committee hearing run by a bipartisan committee a team of Democrats and two Republicans who, can you believe it, appear to respect each other.

But that also means not enough people are paying attention or simply won't, abetted by Fox News' refusal to carry the first prime-time hearing live in favor of featuring Tucker Carlson deriding it as propaganda.

Thus, last Thursday's episode served as a plainspoken table-setting chapter and an educational reset for any tuned in to ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, PBS, C-SPAN or MSNBC, with Thompson explaining why the committee embarked on its investigation against the wishes of nearly every Republican member of congress.

Our entertainment landscape is awash with alternatives more exciting than a stodgy congressional committee hearing.

"I come before you this evening not as a Democrat but as an American who swore an oath to defend the Constitution," Thompson said, explaining that every member of Congress swears the same oath upon taking office: "to defend the Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic."

The prime-time opener of the Jan. 6 committee's hearings demonstrates comprehension of dramatic structure, not only regarding episodic presentation but in terms of spelling out a full season arc. Mind you, it was devoid of puzzle-box flourishes or the type of juiced-up "Desperate Housewives"-style heat that amplifies unscripted reality and episodic true crime.

Cheney introduced the committee's aim in these hearings to clearly spell out "plots to commit seditious conspiracy on Jan. 6" by explaining exactly what each episode is going to show us. Monday's second hearing presented recorded testimony from campaign chief Bill Stepien and aide Jason Miller, who told the committee that they informed Trump the election was lost and advised him against making any statement on the night of the election.

The next hearing is a dive into Trump's efforts to corrupt the Justice Department, a development about which former Attorney General Bill Barr has already dropped hints.

Some of its "loglines" were teased before the hearings began, mainly the revelations that in the days leading up to January 6, 2021, former President Donald Trump pressured his Vice President Mike Pence to assist him in overturning the election results. Because of this the first Pence-centered hearing, originally estimated to be the fourth, will probably be a popular one.

Other were announced by Cheney during the first telecast, along with scheduled appearances such as Monday's main "get": live testimony by former Fox News political editor Chris Stirewalt, the man behind that network's controversial and ultimately correct decision to call Arizona for Joe Biden on election night.

The coda of its curtain-raiser featured committee Vice-Chair Liz Cheney, R-Wy., spelling out the themes of each hearing to come and, where relevant, announcing corroborating testimony from a variety of witnesses many of them former members of Trump's inner circle.

Before that came the drama's introduction of its first hero, Capitol Police officer Caroline Edwards, and a few of this story's monsters, including the Proud Boys meeting and the Oath Keepers.

US Capitol Police Officer Caroline Edwards testifies during a House Select Committee hearing to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the US Capitol, in the Cannon House Office Building on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC on June 9, 2022. (BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP via Getty Images)

It injected unintentional comic relief in the guise of Barr's taped deposition in which he described Trump's claims about the 2020 election having been stolen as, among other epic terms, "crazy," "garbage," "idiotic" and "bulls**t."

In the telecast's closing moments, their members' words speak to the question driving the season, the hearing's "Guys . . . where are we?" equivalent. At the root of all of this, the premieres spell out, the committee endeavors to prove, is Donald Trump's desire to hold on to power at any cost.

To some, describing this historic televised chronicle in the terms of scripted drama may seem to cheapen the proceedings. The opposite is true it's a highly rational strategy to meet the audience where it is.

Goldston's hand in the hearings' production is light enough for the viewer to appreciate how easy-to-follow each installment is. For the most part, the committee has delivered as promised, save for a last-minute cancellation by Stepien, whose wife went into labor. Even then, his video deposition was edited in a way to fit within the flow of the committee's script.

It's also present in the "casting," as it were, of the committee's witnesses. Footage of Ivanka Trump's agreement with Barr made headlines, understandably. However, the conscious decision to call upon Edwards to testify is particularly savvy.

Describing this historic televised chronicle in the terms of scripted drama may seem to cheapen the proceedings. The opposite is true.

Edwards is a compelling witness in any forum; the footage shows her single-handedly doing her best to hold back a surge of insurrectionists and sustaining a head injury when they overwhelmed her. She's also a blonde, white woman and a veteran's daughter, which is to say she embodies the type of woman the far-right professes to champion.

Establishing a public record of the committee's findings is the main mission here, but so is persuading any skeptics or deniers. Edwards pushes back on those assumptions with her statements and her image.

But the hearings also employ the all-important element of unpredictability, keeping its most quotable segments under wraps until broadcast. Miller's and Stepien's testimony that Trump's false claims of a stolen election may have begun with a drunken suggestion by an "apparently inebriated Rudy Giuliani," generated the second-best catchphrase of the day after Stepien's bumper sticker-ready "Team Normal," as he describes the group advising Trump against declaring victory.

Every show worth watching generates merchandising opportunities.

A few analyses of Thursday's primetime broadcast try to whet the reader's appetite by calling the committee's televised hearing the must-watch event of the summer. This is probably an exaggeration in a media environment as fractured as this one, to say nothing of how jaded we are after living through a presidency that warped reality for a frighteningly large percentage of the American population.

Our lawmakers have taught the modern TV audience that congressional and senatorial committee hearings deemed important enough to lead or drive the news cycle are merely opportunities for them to grandstand for their constituents. Since their votes are already decided and no amount of qualifying evidence or disqualifying evidence could change their minds, weighing facts doesn't enter the equation.

Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.

Viewers presumed to be actively engaged in watching this committee's presentations are accustomed to having such cases built up by cable news hosts and experts only to be denied a payoff of comeuppance. We all lived through televised hearings of special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into whether Trump courted Russian interference in the 2016 election, which was hyped for nearly two years and resulted in a flurry of criminal charges brought against Trump's associates but none against Trump himself.

In terms of the hearings for Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh and associate justice-designate Ketanji Brown Jackson, the notion that senators debated their fitness to hold a position was a farce, giving way to the spectacle of surmising how well one's "team" holds up against the opposition.

The viewer, therefore, expects chaos and cacophony from these events, not debate or elucidation or, heaven forbid, progress or results.

Jan. 6 committee members who have spoken to the press outside of the hearings have been careful to say they're not necessarily counting on results, either. They're focused on ensuring their findings are witnessed and considered, that they become the topic of whatever the equivalent of water cooler discussion is at a time when gathering around a single reference point feels impossible.

Obviously they committee is doing whatever they can to lay a narrative course solid enough to end with an indictment for Trump, regardless of how notoriously difficult finales are to nail to everyone's satisfaction ask the creators of both of those dramas mentioned up top. But if enough of us remain tuned in to that point, that counts as a win by any metric.

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From clear scripts to big-name casting, the Jan. 6 hearings meet the standards of must-see TV - Salon

What Do Republicans Believe? 15 Things a Republican Stands For

I have a B.A. in History and Creative Writing and an M.A. in History. I enjoy politics, movies, television, poker, video games, and trivia.

A List of Things Republicans Believe In

Do all Republicans believe the same things? Of course not. Rarely do members of a single political group agree on all issues. Even among Republicans, there are differences of opinion. As a group, they do not agree on every issue.

Some folks vote Republican because of fiscal concerns. Often, that trumps concerns they may have about social issues. Others are less interested in the fiscal position of the party. They vote they way they do because of religion. They believe Republicans are the party of morality. Some simply want less government. They believe only Republicans can solve the problem of big government. Republicans spend less (except on military). They lower taxes: some people vote for that alone.

However, the Republican Party does stand for certain things. So I'm answering with regard to the party as a whole. Call it a platform. Call them core beliefs. The vast majority of Republicans adhere to certain ideas.

So what do Republicans believe? Here are their basic tenets:

This is pretty universal among Republicans. Government should not be providing solutions to problems that confront people (like health issues or paying bills). Those problems should be solved by the people themselves. A Republican would say that relying on the government to solve problems is a crutch that makes people lazy and feel entitled to receive things without working for them.

A Republican believes that decision-making should be as local as possible and if there's something important that needs solving on a social level, the state's decision should trump any federal decisions. The federal government should not have control over state decisions, generally speaking.

The free market is the perfect decision-maker. There need be no interference in the market because ultimately, the needs and desires of manufacturers and consumers will resolve themselves correctly in an unregulated market.

Republicans are generally accepting only of the Judeo-Christian belief system. For most Republicans, religion is absolutely vital in their political beliefs and the two cannot be separated. Therefore, separation of church and state is not that important to them. In fact, they believe that much of what is wrong has been caused by too much secularism.

Those are the four basic Republican tenets: small government, local control, the power of free markets, and Christian authority. Below are other things they believe that derive from those four ideas.

No matter what the situation, Republicans believe in lowering taxes across the board, for both individuals and businesses. As far as they are concerned, the more money that stays in the hands of the private sector, the better. They think people and businesses should be able to determine how and when they spend their money.

Republicans favor a strong military . . . and using that military. Republicans are usually hawks where Democrats are doves. The strong military stance demonstrates how Republicans use the power of the federal government, though they believe that a strong military spurs innovation and directs tax dollars as investments into businesses they support.

Republicans are more likely to argue for the privatization of things than Democrats, even going so far as to advocate for privatizing fire departments and the police in some cases. This goes for Social Security, healthcare, medicare, and virtually anything else that's linked to the government in any way. No matter what it is, they think that private industry can always do a better job than government.

This comes from their religious beliefs, which form the basis for a lot of policy. Republicans believe that homosexuality is a choice and, as such, gay people should not be acknowledged in the same way as other groups. Therefore, according to a Republican, homosexuals should not be allowed to marry, nor should they be allowed to adopt children.

Republicans support the position of the NRA and do not believe in gun control. They believe in the right of all citizens to own guns as detailed in the Constitution.

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Republicans are fundamentally against abortion and do not support the idea that a woman should be able to choose whether to end a pregnancy no matter the reason, though some Republicans make exceptions for rape and incest. Although Republicans believe abortion is murder and believe Roe v. Wade should be overturned, they do not usually explain what punishment should befall those who get or give abortions should it become illegal.

Generally, Republicans question the conclusions scientists have come to regarding global warming. At best, they believe that the effects of global warming have been overstated and that regulating emissions should not be done; at worst, they believe global warming is a hoax.

Republicans reject the theory of evolution and believe in creationism, the idea that God created man the way he is. They believe creationism should be taught in public schools.

Republicans believe that illegal immigrants, no matter the reason they are in this country, should be forcibly removed from the U.S. Although illegal immigrants are often motivated to come to the U.S. by companies who hire them, Republicans generally believe that the focus of the law should be on the illegal immigrants and not on the corporations that hire them.

Republicans believe that poor people are usually poor for a reason, be it laziness, choice or whatever. Unless we demand that people pull themselves up by the bootstraps and solve their own problems, people will not be motivated to do things. Therefore, the issue of poverty cannot be solved by the government. Charity should be the choice of individuals.

Republicans believe in the death penalty and support its use in cases where violent crimes have been committed.

15 Differences Between Democrats and Republicans

Party Realignment in the Trump Era: Right Populists vs. Progressives

This content reflects the personal opinions of the author. It is accurate and true to the best of the authors knowledge and should not be substituted for impartial fact or advice in legal, political, or personal matters.

Question: Who is the leader of the Republican Party?

Answer: Donald Trump.

Question: Why doesn't Donald Trump believe in most of the typical Republican things besides immigration stances?

Answer: Donald Trump is not a typical Republican.

Question: Who is the the leader of the Green Party?

Answer: Jonathan Bartley and Sian Berry have been elected as new joint leaders of the Green Party.

Question: Why do people want to get rid of guns when it's against the second amendment of the U.S. Constitution?

Answer: People probably want to get rid of guns because they are so often used to kill people and they think that will help.

2011 Allen Donald

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What Do Republicans Believe? 15 Things a Republican Stands For