Trump delays V.P. announcement
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CLEVELAND — In a stunning move late
Thursday, Donald Trump said he was scrapping his plans to announce a
running mate because of the terrorist attack in southern France,
following a day of strong signals that Indiana Gov. Mike Pence was the
likely choice.
Throughout the day, aides to Trump, the
presumptive Republican presidential nominee, were preparing to formally
announce Pence as the vice-presidential candidate at a news conference
in New York on Friday morning. But by early evening, Trump said that he
had yet to make a “final, final decision” between Pence and two other
candidates, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie and former House speaker Newt
Gingrich (Ga.).
With the Republican National Convention just
days away, it was unclear when Trump would finalize or announce his
selection. But he won an important victory as Republicans setting the
rules of next week’s convention squashed attempts to rob him of the GOP
nomination.
Trump cited the attack in Nice as his reason for
postponing his vice-presidential announcement, although that was the
only part of his campaign he was suspending. On Thursday night, he
continued with fundraising events in California, and he called in to two
Fox News Channel broadcasts for interviews.
Pence was spotted
Thursday evening in New York, an indication that he had been chosen,
while Gingrich had no plans to be in the city, according to several
Republicans familiar with the process.
Trump sparked intense
speculation as he held off throughout the day on notifying Pence or any
other potential picks of his decision, said these Republicans, who spoke
on the condition of anonymity because of the confidentiality of the
ongoing talks.
Campaign officials cautioned that the selection
process remains fluid — and although they did not dispute that Pence
probably would be chosen, they noted that Trump still could spring a
surprise.
For Pence, the timing is crucial: Under Indiana law, he
has only until noon on Friday to have his name removed from the
November ballot for his reelection bid. That step would be required if
he were the vice-presidential nominee.
In an interview early
Thursday evening with Fox News Channel, Trump said, “I haven’t made my
final, final decision. I mean, I’ve got three people that are
fantastic.” He went on to praise all of them.
Trump had been torn
between following his gut instincts to tap a fiery combatant such as
Gingrich or Christie and heeding his advisers by selecting the
soft-spoken and low-profile Pence.
Pence’s elevation to the
ticket could help unify the divided Republican Party ahead of next
week’s national convention in Cleveland. Early reports that Pence would
be chosen were welcomed on Capitol Hill, with House Speaker Paul D. Ryan
(Wis.) calling the governor “a good movement conservative.”
A
deeply conservative former congressman and talk-radio host, Pence, 57,
is a seasoned politician who could help bring together disparate blocs
of the Republican coalition. Trump would rely on Pence especially to
bring aboard social conservatives and establishment leaders who remain
skeptical of, if not outright hostile to, Trump’s candidacy.
Trump
has long said he wanted a running mate with governing experience who
could help him enact his agenda in Washington, and Pence’s credentials
as a former House Republican leader seem to fit the bill.
However,
Pence’s gubernatorial tenure has been marked by controversy over a
state law considered discriminatory against gays and has alienated
Democrats, who consider him a rigid, socially conservative ideologue.
Pence
has not always agreed with Trump’s policy ideas. In December, for
instance, the governor criticized Trump’s controversial proposal to
temporarily ban Muslims from entering the United States. “Calls to ban
Muslims from entering the U.S. are offensive and unconstitutional,” he
tweeted.
On trade, Pence and Trump have been on opposite sides.
While Trump campaigns as a strident protectionist, opposing the
Trans-Pacific Partnership and vowing to renegotiate the North American
Free Trade Agreement, Pence has been a proponent of such deals. As a
member of Congress, Pence voted for every free-trade agreement that he faced.
Throughout
Trump’s weeks-long deliberations over a running mate, his political
advisers, including campaign chairman Paul Manafort, have urged him to
select Pence, people familiar with the discussions said.
But the
candidate’s adult children, as well as his son-in-law, Jared Kushner,
have given him differing advice at times. Donald Trump Jr., the
candidate’s eldest son, and Kushner have advocated for Gingrich, people
close to the family said.
Trump Jr. insisted in a note Thursday
that there has been “no rift or lobbying whatsoever” and described the
family’s conversations about a running mate as “very calm and
organized.” He said that he admires Gingrich and Christie, and that he
hasn’t known “Mike as long but was very impressed” when they met on
Tuesday and Wednesday.
“It’s about who will mesh best with my father,” Trump Jr. wrote.
All
week, Trump has built suspense around his deliberations. He held
campaign events with the three finalists to test chemistry and to
measure the reaction of crowds. He held a series of meetings in Indiana
on Wednesday. And on Thursday, even as word leaked that Pence was the
likely pick, Trump played coy.
Republican lawmakers responded
to Thursday’s reports with warm words for Pence, but cautioned that
they, too, had received no word on the selection from Trump or his
campaign.
“I’m happy for him and happy for the ticket,” said Sen.
Bob Corker (Tenn.), who advises Trump on foreign policy and other
issues.
Although Corker added, “I don’t know for real that this
is it. . . . I’m surprised. I would have thought they’d be waiting until
tomorrow — usually people wait until the last minute to make a
decision. So that’s why I’m a little cautious.”
Trump is known to
value loyalty and those who have supported him from the early days of
his unconventional campaign. Pence endorsed Trump’s chief primary rival,
Sen. Ted Cruz (Tex.), shortly before the Indiana primary in May.
Although the endorsement was notably tepid and seemed designed to offend
Trump as little as possible, they were clearly at odds with each other.
With
his comfortable victory in Indiana a few days after that endorsement,
Trump effectively clinched the nomination — knocking out his final two
opponents, Cruz and Ohio Gov. John Kasich. The sweeping Indiana victory
remains a point of pride for Trump that he often celebrates on the
campaign trail.
Sen. Jeff Sessions (Ala.), considered a long-shot
vice-presidential prospect but one who has grown close to Trump, also
visited with Trump in Indiana and traveled with him to California late
Wednesday. Retired Lt. Gen. Michael T. Flynn, a registered Democrat, was
another person Trump considered in recent days.
But all morning
Thursday, there were signs that Pence had become Trump’s top choice. The
governor convened an 8 a.m. meeting in Indianapolis with political
allies to go over logistics should he join the ticket,
Also
Thursday, Marc Lotter, Pence’s deputy campaign manager, was spotted by
reporters on a flight from Indianapolis to New York, where Friday’s
announcement would have been made.
The moves had Pence associates
in Indiana abuzz about his likely selection. One of the governor’s top
advisers and fundraisers said, “Most everybody in Indiana thinks it’s
Pence.”
The hope within Trump’s orbit has been that he could win
plaudits from powerful Republicans for choosing someone they largely
find acceptable — and that he could get a fresh look from
general-election voters who have been eager for signs of seriousness
from the combative businessman.
Indeed, many GOP lawmakers praised Pence on Thursday.
“Mike
Pence has the legislative experience, having been in Congress and been a
leader here,” said Sen. John Barrasso (Wyo.). “I think he’d be a good
choice, but that doesn’t mean the other guys aren’t good choices, too.”
Rep. Luke Messer (Ind.) said picking Pence would be a wise choice by Trump.
“He
makes the ticket better from day one,” Messner said. “I think it will
be an important step toward bringing the entire coalition behind the
Trump ticket.”
But some more moderate Republican lawmakers said
they were concerned Pence is too rigidly conservative to help Trump with
the general electorate.
“If the objective is to broaden the
appeal of the party beyond the base, I’m not sure this would be the
wisest choice,” said Rep. Charlie Dent (Pa.), noting Pence’s positions
on social issues.
Meanwhile late Thursday, Republicans
responsible for setting the party’s presidential nomination rules
overwhelmingly rejected attempts to formally unbind delegates to the
convention, effectively killing serious attempt to rob Trump of the GOP
nod.
A vote came quickly Thursday night as part of a day-long
marathon session of the Republican National Convention’s rules
committee, which sets the rules of the meetings and how the party will
pick its nominee in 2020.
The rejection of the “unbinding”
proposal was so overwhelming that committee leaders opted not to record
the tally. Trump supporters on the committee quickly exercised
procedural tactics to effectively kill any attempt to revive the issue —
and to codify that delegates are indeed bound to vote for the results
of state caucuses and primaries.
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