About a month ago, as North Carolina Lt. Gov. Mark Robinson was mired in scandal and losing GOP support, a reporter asked Donald Trump whether he’d pull his endorsement from his party’s gubernatorial nominee in the Tar Heel State.
“Uh, I don’t know the situation,” the former president replied.
Last week, while campaigning in North Carolina, Trump was asked again about whether he continued to support Robinson’s statewide candidacy. “I’m not familiar with the race,” he said. “I haven’t seen it.”
The answers were unsatisfying, but they were at least rational. Trump is certainly a highly provocative and unpopular figure in his own right, but Robinson has become politically radioactive. It didn’t surprise anyone to see the former president — who’d previously championed the lieutenant governor’s bid — keep the gubernatorial hopeful at arm’s length.
What was surprising was when Trump’s running mate, just days later, did the opposite.
JD Vance's closing message in NC: "I want to give a shout out to…you guys have a great Lieutenant Governor…sorry Mark isn't here."
— Alex Floyd (@alexjfloyd) October 25, 2024
Way to finish strong in the final days with a s/o to Mark Robinson! 💪 pic.twitter.com/MWTBu60RqU
Campaigning in North Carolina, Republican vice presidential nominee JD Vance — unprompted — said at an event, “I want to give a shoutout to — you guys have a great lieutenant governor.”
A moment later, looking down at his notes, the Ohio senator added, “Sorry, um, we got — sorry. Mark isn’t here.”
That was, to be sure, a rather awkward moment, with Vance apparently expecting Robinson to be on hand for the event, only to learn otherwise in real time. But putting the clumsiness aside, there was a larger question hanging overhead:
Since when does the Trump campaign tout Robinson as “a great lieutenant governor”?








