Media Search:



Recapping Wednesday’s Cases, and Predicting the Remaining 8 Cases – Reason

On Wednesday, the Court decided four cases. Each decision resolved an important question of constitutional law. First Collins v. Yellen held that the structure of the Federal House Finance Agency was unconstitutional. Second,Mahanoy Area School Districtheld that a school could not punish a student for sending "vulgar" snapchat messages. Third,Cedar Point Nursery v. Hassid held that California violated the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment by requiring farmers to admit union organizers. Fourth,Lange v. California held that the hot pursuit doctrine does not categorically apply to a fleeing misdemeanant. I have now edited all four cases for the Barnett/Blackman supplement. (Randy and I have added a chapter on constitutional criminal procedure to the Fourth Edition of our casebook.) Please email me if you'd like a copy.

I plan to write more about each case. Here, I'd like to revisit my dismal predictions. I correctly predicted that Justice Alito would writeCollins. I whiffed on the other three. I had hoped Justice Kagan would write Mahanoy. She would have brought verve to the topic of student free speech. Alas, generations of principals, teachers, and students will have to suffer from Justice Breyer's staid prose. I thought Justice Alito or Kavanaugh would write Cedar Point. Wrong. The Chief kept it for himself. In light of his votes inHorne I and II, Roberts is especially strong on the Takings Clause. If there is a vehicle somewhere to overrule Kelo, now is the shot. Finally, I didn't have strong thoughts onLange. I predicted Sotomayor, but instead we got a Kagan opinion.

We are left with eight cases. The Court will hand down some tomorrow, and probably the rest on Monday, possibly Tuesday.

January Sitting

Only one case is outstanding: Guzman-Chavez. I still don't have a strong prediction here. I'll give this statutory interpretation case to Barrett. She was very active during oral arguments on statutory nuance.

February Sitting

Only one case is outstanding:Brnovich. Because Roberts ended up writingCedar Point, I am going with Alito or Kavanaugh forBrnovich.

March Sitting

Only one case is outstanding: TransUnion. I'll stay with Kagan for this Rule 23 case.

April Sitting

Justice Breyer wrote the majority in Mahanoy. There are five outstanding cases from that sitting: PennEast (Barrett),Minerva (Kagan), AFP/Thomas More v. Bonta (Roberts),Chehalis (Gorsuch), andHollyFrontier (Barrett).

Go here to see the original:
Recapping Wednesday's Cases, and Predicting the Remaining 8 Cases - Reason

A Philly man was cleared of murder after 34 years by evidence that was in the police file all along – The Philadelphia Inquirer

More than 30 years ago, based only on the statements of two witnesses who either recanted or failed to appear in court, Curtis Crosland was convicted of the 1984 murder of South Philadelphia store owner Il Man Heo and sentenced to life in prison.

On Thursday, Crosland, 60 a father of five and grandfather of 32 was released from the State Correctional Institution Phoenix in Montgomery County. So many loved ones crowded onto his sisters narrow block in the citys Cobbs Creek section, screaming and hugging, that traffic ground to a halt.

I just came home after 34 years. Ive been exonerated, Crosland apologized to one driver. She responded, Praise God!

Crosland is the 21st person exonerated with support from District Attorney Larry Krasners Conviction Integrity Unit, which concluded that investigators had illegally concealed troubling information about the witnesses who accused Crosland and evidence pointing to another suspect.

U.S. District Judge Anita Brody this week ordered Crosland released or retried, and the DA formally dropped the charges. In her order, Brody affirmed the CIUs efforts, saying the DAs first responsibility is to justice: The responsibility of doing justice does not disappear once a conviction is achieved. In some circumstances, the duty to seek truth can and should extend to cases long closed.

The victims family also welcomed Croslands release, said Charles Heo, 50, who recalled translating the trial prosecutors explanations into Korean for his mother when he was just a teenager: He said, We got the guy. We believed him.

He and his sister Song, 52, described their father, known in the community as Tony, as a revered, lighthearted, generous, and gregarious figure who took care of his neighbors, often carrying over more than $1,000 in I owe yous from those who couldnt afford to pay. He was shot during a gunpoint robbery of his H&B Grocery Store by a masked perpetrator who knew to call him by his first name.

Despite his loss, Heo said he was grateful to see Croslands family reunited. There was an injustice in this case, he said, and the ripple effects caused untold damage through our familys lives, through the Crosland familys lives.

READ MORE: Phillys murder exonerations raise questions about decades of homicide investigations

In court filings, the CIU made clear Croslands case involved not only apparent misconduct but also a compelling innocence claim.

To me, its a case that has all the telltale signs of a wrongful conviction, CIU supervisor Patricia Cummings said. You have a case that was cold. Then you have snitches involved wanting something in their case, and then the historical lack of understanding and appreciation of [disclosure requirements].

According to legal filings, the case was built on lies by informants police knew were tainted long before Croslands arrest.

One man, Rodney Everett, was facing a parole violation when he agreed to provide information in multiple murder cases even testifying in two preliminary hearings on the same day.

The DAs search of the police file yielded extensive undisclosed documents, including a failed polygraph test, a statement from Everetts wife that he had identified a different perpetrator, and an undated letter from Everett to a homicide detective, seeking help in exchange for information.

The other informant, Delores Tilghman, had previously given a false statement in a different murder case, prosecutors say.

In interviews Thursday, both witnesses said they felt coerced into giving false statements.

It was just very brutal. They threaten you. They will use your family and they will tell you what they will do to your family, taking your kids, said Everett, who testified at Croslands preliminary hearing but said he repeatedly tried to recant. When you tell the truth, they dont care. Theyll accept the lies, but they wont accept the truth.

Everett refused to testify at Croslands trial, invoking his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination, but his earlier statement was read into the record. After Croslands conviction was overturned, Everett was granted immunity to testify at the second trial but recanted on the stand.

Yet Crosland was convicted again by a second jury.

READ MORE: The battle in Philly DAs Office: Conviction Integrity Unit report shows rocky path to reform

As for Tilghman, she said detectives came to her home and woke her up, threatening to arrest her if she didnt testify.

It was him or me, she said. They were threatening me with putting me in jail. ... They can make that happen. I seen them make his life disappear with one witness.

She said shed long regretted her role in the case and was glad to learn of Croslands release.

Over the years, Crosland has presented a growing collection of evidence to support his innocence: three eyewitnesses to the robbery and murder who said he was not the killer, and eventually another witness willing to identify the alternative suspect. He filed nine post-conviction relief petitions in state court and four federal habeas petitions before he was finally cleared by evidence that was contained in Philadelphia police and prosecutors files all along.

Some of that information was sealed in connection with grand jury investigations, but Cummings said that doesnt excuse the nondisclosure.

The exculpatory information was technically in the hands of prosecutors, she said, and should have been provided.

Crosland represented himself for decades as lawyers botched his case, abandoned his claims, or filed letters with court saying his case had no merit. After the Federal Community Defender Office was appointed, they gained support from the CIU.

When he saw the evidence that had been hidden in the case last year, he said, it made me very emotional. It was mind-blowing that all that could be hidden, to convict an innocent man. It was painful. It was difficult to even share with my family some of the things I learned that happened to me.

But on Thursday night, home with his sons and wearing street clothes for the first time in 34 years, he and his family said it felt like divine intervention.

Risheen Crosland, 36, of West Oak Lane, was just 2 when his father was arrested. His oldest brother, Curtis Jr., became the father figure at age 6.

I was told when I was 16 that he would always belong to the state of Pennsylvania, Risheen Crosland said. I tried everything I could to get my father out. Then when nothing else worked, it seemed like God just showed me what he could really do.

Engaged to his childhood sweetheart Jackie Gray, Crosland said his goal now is to get a decent job, spend time with his family, and use his hard-earned legal knowledge to help the other family of innocent men he left behind in prison.

Then, more calls and FaceTime visits came in, from even more friends and relatives whod just heard the news. Crosland had decided to keep his homecoming a secret, after so many decades of hopes raised and then dashed.

You never know whats going to happen, he said. For years, Ive been saying, Im coming and Its gonna happen, and it didnt happen. I didnt want them to feel torn down.

See the rest here:
A Philly man was cleared of murder after 34 years by evidence that was in the police file all along - The Philadelphia Inquirer

Anandtech: "Using AI to Build Better Processors: Google Was Just the Start, Says Synopsys" – AnandTech

In an exclusive to AnandTech, we spoke with Synopsys CEO Aart de Geus ahead of a pair of keynote presentations at two upcoming technical semiconductor industry events this year. Synopsys reached out to give us an overview of the key topic of the day, of the year:as part of these talks, Aart will discuss what was considered impossible only a few years ago the path to finding a better and automated way into chip design through the use of machine learning solutions. Within the context of EDA tools,as Google has demonstrated recently, engineers can be assisted in building better processors using machine learning algorithms.

If you read mainstream columns about technology and growth today, there is an eminent focus on the concepts of big data, artificial intelligence, and the value of analyzing that data. With enough data that has been analyzed effectively, companies have shown that they are proactive to customers,predict their needs in advance, or identify trends and react before a human has even seen the data. The more data you have analyzed, the better your actions or reactions can be. This has meant that analyzing the amount of data itself has intrinsic value, as well as the speed at which it is processed. This has causedan explosion of the demand for better analysis tools but also an explosion in data creation itself. Many senior figures in technology and business see the intersection and development of machine learning data analysis tools to churn through that data as the mark of the next generation of economics.

Graph showing manufacturing growth of key silicon product lines since 2016at TSMC, the world's largest contract manufacturer

The desire to have the best solution is accelerating the development of better utilities, but at the same time, the need to deploy it at scale is creating immense demand for resources. All the while, a number of critics are forecasting that Moores Law, a 1960s observation around the exponential development of complex computing that has held true for 50 years, is reaching its end. Othersare busy helping it to stay on track. As driving performance requires innovation on multiple levels, including hardware and software, the need to optimize every abstraction layer to continue that exponential growth has become more complex, more expensive, and requires a fundamental economic gain to those involved to continue investment.

One of the ways in driving performance on the hardware side is in designing processors to work faster and more efficiently. Two processors with the same fundamental building blocks can have those blocks placed in many different orientations, with some arrangements beneficial for power, others for performance, or perhaps for design area, while some configurations make no sense whatsoever. Finding the best combination in light of the economics at the time is often crucial to the competitiveness of the product and the buoyancy of the company that relies on the success of that product. The semiconductor industry is rare in that most chip design companies effectively bet the entire company on the success of the next generation, which makes every generation's design more important than the last.

In light of the rate of innovation, chip design teams have spent tens of thousands of hours honing their skills over decades. But we are at a stage where a modern complex processor has billions of transistors and millions of building blocks to put together in something the size of a toenail. These teams use their expertise, intuition, and nous to place these units in the best configuration, and it gets simulated over the course of 72 hours. The results that come through are analyzed, the design goes back to be updated, and the process repeats. Getting the best human-designed processor in this fashion can take six months or more, because the number of arrangements possible is equivalent to the number of atoms in the known universe risen to the power of the number of atoms in the known universe. With numbers so large, using computers to brute force the best configuration is impossible. At least, it was thought to be.

Work from Google was recently published in the scientific journal Nature about how the company is already using custom AI tools to develop better silicon, which in turn helps develop better custom AI tools. In the research paper, the company applied machine learning algorithms to find the best combination of power, performance, and die area for a number of test designs.

In order to reduce the complexity of the problem, Google limited its scope to certain layers within the design. Take, for example, an electrical circuit that is designed to add numbers together - in Googles work, rather than try and find the best way to build a circuit like this every time, they took a good adder design as a fundamental building block of the problem, mapped how it interacts with other different fundamental blocks, and then the AI software found the best way to build these fundamental blocks. This cuts down the number of different configurations needed, but the problem is still a difficult one to crack, as these blocks will interact with other blocks to varying degrees based on proximity, connections, and electrical/thermal interactions. The nature of the work always depends on what level of abstraction these different building blocks take, and how complex/basic you make them.

Simple 8-stage example of block placement and routing affects the design choices

In Googles paper, the company states that their tools have already been put to use in helping design four parts of an upcoming Google TPU processor designed for machine learning acceleration. While the paper showcases that AI tools werent used across the whole processor, it is taking some of the work that used to be painstaking in engineer labor hours and accelerating the process through computation. The beauty of this application is that the way these building blocks can be put together can scale, and companies like Google can use their datacenters to test thousands of configurations in a single day, rather than having a group of engineers provide a handful of options after several months.

Googles approach also details the effect of using optimized machine learning (so algorithms that have learned how to be better by examining previous designs) against fresh machine learning (algorithms with only a basic understanding that learn from their own trial and error). Both these areas are important, showcasing that in some circumstances, the algorithms do not need to be pre-trained but can still deliver a better-than-human result. That result still requires additional validation for effectiveness, and the results are fed back into the software team to create better algorithms.

But this is just the tip of the iceberg, according to Synopsys CEO Aart de Geus, whose company's software helps develop more silicon processing intellectual property in the industry today than anyone else. Synopsys has been involved in silicon design for over 35+ years, with hundreds of customers, and its latest AI-acceleratedproduct is already in use at a number of high-profile silicon design teams making processors today to help accelerate time to market with a better semiconductor placement than humans can achieve.

Synopsys is a company that makes EDA tools, or Electronic Design Automation, and every semiconductor company in the industry, both old and new, relies on some form of EDA to actually bring silicon to market. EDA tools allow semiconductor designers to effectively write code that describes what they are trying to make, and that can be simulated to sufficient accuracy to tell the designer if it fits within strict parameters, meets the requirements for the final manufacturing, or if it has thermal problems, or perhaps signal integrity does not meet required specifications for a given standard.

EDA tools also rely on abstraction, decades of algorithm development, and as the industry is moving to multi-chip designs and complex packaging technologies, the software teams behind these tools have to be quick to adapt to an ever-changing landscape. Having relied on complex non-linear algorithm solutions to assist designers to date, the computational requirements of EDA tools are quite substantial, and often not scalable. Thus, ultimately any significant improvement to EDA tool design is a welcome beacon in this market.

For context, the EDA tools market has two main competitors, with a combined market cap of $80B and a combined annual revenue of $6.5B. All the major foundries work with these two EDA vendors, and it is actively encouraged to stay within these toolchains, rather than to spin your own, to maintain compatibility.

Synopsys CEO Aart de Geus is set to take the keynote presentations at two upcoming technical semiconductor industry events this year: ISSCC and Hot Chips. As part of these talks, Aart will discuss what was considered impossible only a few years ago the path to finding a better and automated way into chip design through the use of machine learning solutions. Within the context of EDA tools, as Google has demonstrated publicly, engineers can be assisted in building better processors, or similarly not so many engineers are needed to build a good processor. To this point, Aarts talk at Hot Chips will be titled:

Does Artificial Intelligence Require Artificial Architects?

I spent about an hour speaking with Aart on this topic and what it means to the wider industry. The discussion would have made a great interview on the topic, although unfortunately this was just an informal discussion! But in our conversation, aside from the simple fact that machine learning can help silicon design teams optimize more variations with better performance in a fraction of the time, Aart was clear that the fundamental drive and idea of Moores Law, regardless of the exact way you want to interpret what Gordon Moore actually said, is still driving the industry forward in very much the same way that is has been the past 50 years. The difference is now that machine learning, as a cultural and industrial revolution, is enabling emergent compute architectures and designs leading to a new wave of complexity, dubbed systemic complexity.

Aart also presented to me the factual way how the semiconductor industry has evolved. At each stage of fundamental improvement, whether thats manufacturing improvement through process node lithography such as EUV or transistor architectures like FinFET or Gate-All-Around, or topical architecture innovation for different silicon structures such as high performance compute or radio frequency, we have been relying on architects and research to enable those step-function improvements. In a new era of machine learning assisted design, such as the tip of the iceberg presented by Google, new levels of innovation can emerge, albeit with a new level of complexity on top.

Aart described that with every major leap, such as moving from 200mm to 300mm wafers, or planar to FinFET transistors, or from DUV to EUV, it all relies on economics no one company can make the jump without the rest of the industry coming along and scaling costs. Aart sees the use of machine learning in chip design, for use at multiple abstraction layers, will become a de-facto benefit that companies will use as a result of the current economic situation the need to have the most optimized silicon layout for the use case required. Being able to produce 100 different configurations overnight, rather than once every few days, is expected to revolutionize how computer chips are made in this decade.

The era of AI accelerated chip design is going to be exciting. Hard work, but very exciting.

From Synopsys point of view, the goal of introducing Aart to me and having the ability to listen to his view and ask questions was to give me a flavor ahead of his Hot Chips talk in August. Synopsys has some very exciting graphs to show, one of which they have provided to me in advance below,on how its own DSO.ai software is tackling these emerging design complexities. The concepts apply to all areas of EDA tools, but this being a business, Synopsys clearly wants to show how much progress it has made in this area and what benefits it can bring to the wider industry.

In this graph, we are plotting power against wire delay. The best way to look at this graph is to start at the labeled point at the top, which says Start Point.

All of the small blue points indicate one full AI sweep of placing the blocks in the design. Over 24 hours, the resources in this test showcase over 100 different results, with the machine learning algorithm understanding what goes where with each iteration. The end result is something well beyond what the customer requires, giving them a better product.

There is a fifth point here that isn't labeled, and that is the purple dots that represent even better results. This comes from the DSO algorithm on a pre-trained network specifically for this purpose. The benefit here is that in the right circumstances, even a better result can be achieved. But even then, an untrained network can get almost to that pointas well, indicated by the best untrained DSO result.

Synopsys has already made some disclosures with customers, such as Samsung. Across four design projects, time to design optimization was reduced by 86%, from a month do days, using up to 80% fewer resources and often beating human-led design targets.

I did come away with several more questions that I hope Aart will address when the time comes.

Firstly I would like to address where the roadmaps lie in improving machine learning in chip design. It is one thing to make the algorithm that finds a potentially good result and then to scale it and produce 100s or 1000s of different configurations overnight, but is there an artificial maximum of what can be considered best, limited perhaps by the nature of the algorithm being used?

Second, Aart and I discussed Googles competition with Go Master and 18-time world champion Lee Sedol, in which Google beat the worlds best Go player 4-1 in a board game that was considered impossible only five years prior for computers to come close to the best humans. In that competition, both the Google DeepMind AI and the human player made a 1-in-10000 move, which is rare in an individual game, but one might argue is more likely to occur in human interactions. My question to Aart is whether machine learning for chip design will ever experience those 1-in-10000 moments, or rather in more technical terms, would the software still be able to find a best global minimum if it gets stuck in a local minimum over such a large (1 in 102500 combinations for chip design vs 1 in 10230 in Go) search space.

Third, and perhaps more importantly, is how applying machine learning at different levels of the design can violate those layers. Most modern processor design relies on specific standard cells and pre-defined blocks there will be situations where modified versions of those blocks might be better in some design scenarios when coupled close to different parts of the design. With all of these elements interacting with each other and having variable interaction effects, the complexity is in managing these interactions within the machine learning algorithms in a time-efficient way, but how these tradeoffs are made is still a point to prove.

In my recent interview with Jim Keller, I asked him if at one point we will see silicon design look unfathomable to even the best engineers he said Yeah, and its coming pretty fast. It is one thing to talk holistically about what AI can bring to the world, but its another to have it working in action to improve semiconductor design and providing a fundamental benefit at the base level of all silicon. Im looking forward to further disclosures on AI-accelerated silicon design from Synopsys, its competitors, and hopefully some insights from those that are using it to design their processors.

Go here to read the rest:
Anandtech: "Using AI to Build Better Processors: Google Was Just the Start, Says Synopsys" - AnandTech

What Mike Pence is saying about the future of the Republican Party – IndyStar

Mike Pence's role in the Trump administration

Mike Pence's role in the Trump administration has been forced more into the spotlight with the president's illness from coronavirus. Here's a look back at Pence's career.

Dwight Adams, dwight.adams@indystar.com

Former vice president Mike Pence is showing no signs of slowing on the speaker circuit.

"The best days for the Republican party and the greatestnation are yet to come," Pence recently proclaimedto a crowd inSimi Valley, California. Speaking at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library,the former vice president laid out his vision fortheconservative movement andaddressed a defining question for his party in thepost-Trump era: What should the Republican Party stand for?"

That central theme is also forging Pence'sown politicalfuture.

'Un-American': Mike Pence uses strongest language yet on refusal to deny election results

Omnipresent: Mike Pence looks at the 2024 presidential race but sees Donald Trump everywhere

Since leaving office his final days tainted by the U.S. Capitol insurrection Pence remained mostly quiet in the early months of 2021. Beginning in April, he quickly bounced back into the public spotlight, fueling speculation thatIndiana's former governoris eyeing a 2024 presidential run.

These days, Pence is working with multiple conservative organizations and deliveringspeeches in crucial electionstates, wherehe's been greetedwith applause, met withsome booing and in New Hampshire earlier this month, he walked on stage to the '70s classic rock staple "Takin' Care of Business."

With that spirit, Pence has been trying toenergize conservative crowds,sharing endless accolades of former President Trump and their White House administration. That said,he also is also trying to build upon his own voicein the Republican party.

"I learned a lot serving alongside President Donald Trump. Some people think we're a little bit different," Pence said, prompting a few laughs from the audience.

He can also do one thing his former boss and potential 2024 competitor cannot: tweet. Sometimes, with the familiarly sporadic all-caps.

In his public appearances and online presence, Pence hascontinued to advocate for traditional conservative values a strong national defense, free market economics and anti-abortion but he's also speaking out about more hot-button topics, including border security,Chinaand "patriotic education."

"We must expose the messthe radical left has used to corrupt the minds of America's youth," Pence said Thursday,criticizing the "Defund the Police" movement,dismissing the idea of systemic racism and calling for the end of critical race theory in schools. He did not speak about the coronavirus pandemic,which has killed more than 600,000 Americans, or his role on the White House task force with the exception of blaming China for not being more transparent about the origins of the virus.

As he pushes ahead with those talking points at speeches and guest appearancesthis summer, here's a detailed look at what Pence's post-vice presidency life has looked like:

Pence made a swift move to his native Indiana on Jan. 20, delivering his vice presidential farewell address from his hometown of Columbus. At the airport there, with Back Home Again in Indianasetting the mood, Pence announced he and his wife Karen would eventually move back to his home state.

Earlier that same day, he hadattended the inauguration of President Joe Biden, unlike Trump, who broke with a longtime presidential tradition. The former president had attacked Pence online for certifying the results of the 2020 election, all while a mob ofrioters stormed the U.S. Capitol and disrupted the certification process.During the riot, some peoplechanted Hang Mike Pence and Bring out Pence," according to video shown during Trump's impeachment trial.

Trump and Pence reportedly met face to facea week after the incident.

Capitol riot footage: Mike Pence sheltering with insurrectionists near

Video from the riots in Washington, D.C. shows Vice President Mike Pence evacuating with his family as insurrectionists were 100 feet away.

USA TODAY

After the insurrection and the tumultuous conclusion of the Trump administration, the Pences reportedly vacationed in the U.S. Virgin Islands.

In February, Pence then joinedthe Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank in Washington, D.C.as a distinguished visiting fellow,"where he advisespolicy experts and writes a monthly column. The latest one criticized the Biden administration's actions on border security.

He also signed on to be a scholar at theYoung AmericaFoundation, a conservative youth movement, where he will deliver speeches at college campuses and student conferences.

After a bit of a break, Pence dove back into the political spotlight with a flurry of professional and personal announcements. In early April, he announced the launch of his own political advocacy group and the release of his upcoming memoir, covering his rise from Columbus to the White House.

The two-book deal with Simon & Schuster raised concerns among its employees and others in the publishing industry, who criticized the company for publishing the former Trump administration official. Their demands to cancel the book deal, centered around Pences track record on LGBTQ issues, marginalized communities and his handling of the coronavirus crisis, were not met. At the time,Simon & Schuster CEO Jonathan Karp told employees canceling would go against their mission to publish a diversity of voices and perspectives.

The book deal could help the former vice president earn millions, with CNN previously reporting Pences deal with Simon & Schuster is in the $3 million to $4 million range, according to publishing industry sources.

Pence took time to take care of personal business in April, too. He had a pacemaker installed after reportedly experiencing "symptoms associated with a slow heart rate." The surgery was successful, according to his office. In 2016, upon being named the Republican vice presidential nominee, Pence disclosed he had an asymptomatic left bundle branch block.

All that set the stage for his first public address since leaving office, at a Palmetto Family Council event in Columbia, South Carolina. Pence praised the Trump administration and criticized President Joe Bidens first 100 days in front of a crowd of friendly conservatives.

"Had enough?" Pence said during his speech, slammingthe administrations liberal policies. "I have."

Mike Pence's South Carolina speech: Praise for Trump, attacks on Biden, silence on Jan. 6

As he tries to look to the future of the Republican party, the events of Jan. 6 continue to cast a dark shadow over Pence.

The House had passed a bipartisan bill creating an independent commission to study the Capitol Riot in May, but itlater failed to pass the Senate.In his home state, Rep. Trey Hollingsworthwas the only Indiana House Republican to support the commission, while Pence's brother Rep. Greg Pence voted against it.

'A day of darkness': Pelosi announces House select committee to investigate Jan. 6 attack

Later that month, the Pences moved into a$1.93 million, 7-bedroom mansion in Carmel, just in time to attend the Indianapolis 500.

Pence finally spoke more extensively about the elephant in the room at a June dinner hosted by Hillsborough County Republicans in Manchester, New Hampshire. He called the U.S. Capitol riot a dark day in American history and noted the disagreement between him and Trump, who continuously refused defeat in the 2020 election and insisted Pence had the power to block the certification of Bidens win.

I dont know if well ever see eye to eye on that day, Pence said, noting he and Trump have spoken many times since leaving office. But I will always be proud of what we accomplished for the American people for the last four years.

At another recent event, Pence was met with boos and and chants of traitor! Some hecklers reportedly had to be removed from his speech at the Faith & Freedom Coalition conference in Orlando, Florida, where Pence addressed a group of conservative activists aiming to win back the majority in the 2022 midterm elections.

In his California speech, he used his strongestlanguage yet to describe his actions on Jan. 6:"There's almost no idea more un-American than the notion that any one person could choose the American President. The presidency belongs to the American people and the American people alone." Pence said, reasserting that he had no authority to rejectany electoral votes certified by states.

Pence will continue his speaking tourin Des Moines, Iowa, at the Family Leadership Summit on July 16, among agathering of "Christians seeking cultural transformation in the family, church, government and more."

In August, he will attendYoung America's Foundation conservative student conference in Houston and he seems eager to keep going.He recently retweeted a link on how college campuses can apply to host the the former vice president as a guest speaker.

IndyStar reporters Kaitlin LangeandSarah Nelson and USA TODAY reportersMaureen Groppe and David Jackson contributed to this report.

Contact IndyStar reporter Rashika Jaipuriar atrjaipuriar@gannett.comandfollow her on Twitter@rashikajpr.

More:
What Mike Pence is saying about the future of the Republican Party - IndyStar

Opinion | The Mike Pence Saga Tells Us More Than We Want to Know – The New York Times

Gail: Wow, great analogies. Plus, it is indeed possible you spend more time thinking about Pence than you ought to.

Bret: Heres a guy who makes his career on the Moral Majority wing of the Republican Party, until he hitches his wagon to the most immoral man ever to win a big-ticket presidential nomination. Phyllis Schlafly deciding to elope with Larry Flynt would have made more sense. Then Pence spends four years as the most servile, toadying, obsequious, fawning, head-nodding, yes-sirring, anything-you-say-boss vice president in history. Hell do anything for Trumps love but not, as the singer Meat Loaf might have said, attempt to steal the presidential election in broad daylight.

For this, Trump rewards Pence by throwing him to a mob, which tried to hunt him down and hang him. But even now, Pence cant get crosswise with his dark lord, so the idea of him ever taking the party in an anti-Trump direction seems like a fantasy.

Gail: You have convinced me that Pence is too much of a wimp to rebel. But you can never tell look what happened to Mitt Romney.

Bret: Unlike Pence, Romney is a true Christian, with actual principles. As for Nikki Haley, I just dont see her winning the Republican nomination. Shes just not Trumpy enough. My bet is on the governor of Florida, Ron DeSantis, with Senator Tim Scott of South Carolina as his vice-presidential nominee. Crazy?

Gail: Oh, God. What a combo. l hear theres a Ron Be Gone movement in Florida. Maybe they can combine it with a Tim, Dont Get In. Or just Not Scott.

Bret: DeSantis is a very shrewd guy. Hes made a point of staying close to Trump, personally, and hes also been very good at baiting the media. His handling of the pandemic was better than most liberals will ever give him credit for, because, unlike Andrew Im still standing Cuomo, he made a point of protecting nursing homes. With Scott on the ticket, he could also peel off some of the Black vote or at least make white suburban voters feel comfortable about voting for a G.O.P. ticket that progressives will inevitably attack as racist.

See the original post here:
Opinion | The Mike Pence Saga Tells Us More Than We Want to Know - The New York Times