In recent months, former Vice President Mike Pence has made dramatic tactical swings, looking more like a pinball than someone preparing himself for a national campaign.
In June, the Republican publicly criticized Donald Trump’s scheme to overturn the 2020 election, and the comments were not well received on the right. A few months later, Pence swung in the opposite direction and denounced scrutiny of the Jan. 6 attack, making conservatives happy anew.
A few months after that, Pence again criticized the former president’s anti-election plan, only to swing back again soon after, defending the Republican National Committee’s controversial “legitimate political discourse” rhetoric.
The pattern suggested it was time for the former vice president to say something the right would find provocative again, which as NBC News reported, is what happened on Friday night.
Former Vice President Mike Pence told GOP donors Friday night that the party “cannot win by fighting yesterday’s battles,” while also strongly condemning apologists for Russian President Vladimir Putin. The remarks, at a Republican National Committee event in New Orleans, created further distance between him and former President Donald Trump.
On the heels of Trump praising Putin as “genius” and “savvy” as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine got underway, Pence declared on Friday night, “There is no room in this party for apologists for Putin. There is only room for champions of freedom.”
He added, “Elections are about the future. My fellow Republicans, we can only win if we are united around an optimistic vision for the future based on our highest values. We cannot win by fighting yesterday’s battles, or by relitigating the past.”
Pence didn’t mention his former boss by name, but he didn’t have to: There’s really only one national GOP leader who’s eager to relitigate the past and serve as a Putin apologist.
There’s no great mystery behind the rhetoric. The former vice president, eyeing another bid for national office, is trying to establish a distinct political identity: Pence, we’re supposed to believe, is effectively Trump without all the affection for the Kremlin.









