By JILL COLVIN (Associated Press)
NEW YORK (AP) — Former Vice President Mike Pence blames Donald Trump for endangering his household “and all those serving at the Capitol” on Jan. 6 in a brand new memoir launched Tuesday.
In “So Help Me God,” Pence recounts, for the primary time in his personal phrases, the Republican former president’s extraordinary effort to push him to overturn the outcomes of the 2020 election and shares his account of the day hundreds of rioters stormed the Capitol, with some chanting “Hang Mike Pence.”
“They had come to protest the result of the election and to prevent Congress from fulfilling its responsibility to open and count the Electoral College votes,” Pence writes. “And, as I later learned, many had come looking for me.”
The ebook, which traces Pence’s life in politics — from serving as youth coordinator for an area Democratic Party to watching then-Vice President Al Gore certify his election loss days after Pence had been sworn in as a member of Congress — largely defends Trump, glossing over and whitewashing lots of his most contentious episodes. “I had always been loyal to President Donald Trump,” the ebook begins.
But Pence, who spent years refusing to publicly criticize his previous boss, makes clear that Jan. 6, 2021, was a breaking level wherein, he writes, Trump’s “reckless words had endangered my family and all those serving at the Capitol.”
“For four years, we had a close working relationship. It did not end well,” Pence writes, summing up their time within the White House. Still, he provides, “we parted amicably when our service to the nation drew to a close. In the months that followed, we spoke from time to time, but when the president returned to the rhetoric that he was using before that tragic day and began to publicly criticize those of us who defended the Constitution, I decided it would be best to go our separate ways.”
The ebook, revealed by Simon & Schuster, comes as Pence seems more and more prone to run for president in 2024, a transfer that may put him in direct battle with Trump, who is predicted to formally launch his personal reelection marketing campaign in Florida on Tuesday evening.
Pence, who within the ebook by no means immediately states that Democrat Joe Biden gained pretty, writes that when Trump first urged holding a rally in Washington on Jan. 6, the day Pence was set to preside over the election’s certification, he thought it was a good suggestion. “My first thought was that a rally that day might be useful as a way to call even more attention to the proceedings on the floor of the House and Senate,” he writes.
Instead, Pence describes sitting within the Senate chamber and presiding over the certification when the Senate parliamentarian leaned over to tell him that rioters had breached the constructing and a member of his Secret Service element dashing over to insist they depart. Pence refused to vacate the constructing and was as an alternative ushered to a Senate loading dock, the place he spent hours, surrounded by employees and members of the family, making calls to army and congressional leaders to coordinate the federal government’s response, because the president — who by no means bothered to verify in on Pence’s security — sat cloistered, watching TV.
“All around was a blur of motion and chaos: security and police officers directing people to safety, staffers shouting and running for shelter. I could see the intensity in the eyes of the Secret Service detail; it was audible, too, in the voices of the Capitol Police. I could hear the fall of footsteps and angry chanting,” Pence writes. Still, Pence insists he was “not afraid,” solely offended at what was unfolding.
At 2:24 p.m., as Pence remained in hiding, Trump fired off that notorious tweet saying Pence “didn’t have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our Country and our Constitution.”
“I just shook my head,” Pence stated he responded. “The truth was, as reckless as the president’s tweet was, I really didn’t have time for it. Rioters were ransacking the Capitol. … The president had decided to be part of the problem. I was determined to be part of the solution. I ignored the tweet and got back to work.”
Pence additionally describes Trump’s marketing campaign to stress him to reject the outcomes of the election by rejecting Electoral College votes or sending them again to the states, regardless that the Constitution makes clear that the vice chairman’s function is only ceremonial.
During one lunch on Nov. 16, 2020, Pence stated he instructed Trump that “if the legal challenges came up short and if he was unwilling to concede, he could simply accept the results of the elections, move forward with the transition, and start a political comeback, winning the Senate runoffs in Georgia, the governor’s race in Virginia in 2021, and the House and Senate in 2022.”
“That accomplished, I said, he could run for president in 2024 and win,” Pence writes. “He seemed unmoved, even weary, at the prospect.”
“‘I don’t know, 2024 is so far off,’” Pence writes that Trump instructed him “before returning to the status of election challenges in various states.”
At one other lunch, Pence stated he inspired Trump “not to look at the election ‘as a loss — just an intermission’” and stated if he “still came up short” after exhausting each authorized choice, Trump ought to “take a bow” and later run once more.
“He nodded, pointed at me as if to say, ‘That’s worth considering,’ and walked into the back hallway,” Pence writes. “I will always wish he had.”
But because the lawsuits Trump’s authorized workforce was pushing continued to fail, Pence writes that Trump’s temper darkened and he turned more and more irate. Pence says Trump berated him, telling him, “You’re too honest,” and predicting that “hundreds of thousands are gonna hate your guts” and “people are gonna think you’re stupid.”
“As the days wore on, it was becoming clear that there would be a real cost to me politically when I presided over the certification of the 2020 election,” Pence writes. “I always knew that I did not possess the authority to overturn the election. I knew it would be hurtful to my friend for me to participate in the certification. But my duty was clear.”
After the Capitol was cleared of the rioters, Congress reconvened and Pence presided over the certification of his and Trump’s loss. For a number of days the 2 males didn’t converse. But after they lastly met, 5 days later, Pence stated they spent greater than 90 minutes collectively, alone.
“I told him that I had prayed for him for the past four and a half years, and I encouraged him to pray,” Pence stated he instructed Trump. “’Jesus can help you through this,’ I said. ‘Call on Him.’ He didn’t say anything.”
“With genuine sadness in his voice, the president then mused, ‘What if we hadn’t had the rally? What if they hadn’t gone to the Capitol?’ Then he said, ‘It’s too terrible to end like this.’”
Source: www.bostonherald.com”