Pence once called a protest the sound of freedom — but he labeled the NFL’s disrespectful

The following article by Marwa Eltagouri was posted on the Washington Post website October 9, 2017:

Vice President Pence left the NFL game between the Indianapolis Colts and the San Francisco 49ers on Oct. 8 as several 49ers players knelt in protest during the national anthem. (Amber Ferguson/The Washington Post)

With his decision to leave Sunday’s Indianapolis Colts game after players knelt during the national anthem, it appears that Vice President Pence is becoming well-versed in the art of walking out.

Just less than a year ago, in November, he arrived for a performance of the Broadway hit “Hamilton” at the Richard Rodgers Theatre in New York, greeted by a mix of boos and cheers. After the show, several dozen of the musical’s cast members zeroed in on Pence as he was getting up to leave.

“You know, we have a guest in the audience this evening,” said Brandon Victor Dixon, the actor who plays Aaron Burr. “And Vice President-elect Pence, I see you walking out, but I hope you will hear us just a few more moments.”

Dixon proceeded to share a message about cast members’ concern that the incoming administration would fail to protect the “diverse America” and uphold the inalienable rights of its citizens, despite race or sexual orientation. Pence reportedly was leaving the auditorium before Dixon finished speaking, but said he heard the full message.

There were protesters outside the theater, too — but they didn’t bother Pence. He was quick to stand up for the crowd and the actors’ rights to free speech.

“I nudged my kids and reminded them that’s what freedom sounds like,” Pence said at the time.

Then, in May, Pence watched as about 100 students walked out of the University of Notre Dame’s graduation ceremony during his commencement speech. They left quietly, met by some cheers and boos, though only briefly. Again, Pence came to their defense, referencing the First Amendment.

“The increasing intolerance and suppression of the time-honored tradition of free expression on our campuses jeopardizes the liberties of every American,” he said in the speech. “This should not and must not be met with silence.”

On Sunday, Pence was at the front and center of another walkout — his own — choosing to leave the Colts game on President Trump’s instructions after more than a dozen San Francisco 49ers players took a knee during the anthem. Many National Football League players have done so to raise awareness of social injustice and racial inequality. Members of the Colts stood for the anthem with arms linked.

Pence said he chose to leave because “we should rally around our Flag and everything that unites us.”

This time, there was no mention of freedom of speech, or any other aspect of the First Amendment. “I don’t think it’s too much to ask NFL players to respect the Flag and our National Anthem,” Pence said in a statement.

In the past, Pence has been vocal about freedom of expression. While serving in Congress, he repeatedly co-sponsored versions of the Free Flow of Information Act, first introduced before Congress in 2005. It aimed to prevent federal entities from forcing a “covered person,” such as a journalist, from disclosing their sources unless ruled by court.

He co-sponsored the legislation a few times, and while it never became law, his advocacy for news media earned him praise from journalists, including an award from a newspaper association.

In 2007, he told the Columbia Journalism Review that he became a supporter of the act after reading about Judith Miller’s 2005 jailing in the New York Times. He told the Review that he developed “a very healthy appreciation for the work that journalists do, and the public good that a free and independent press represents.”

But while Pence has a track record for supporting free speech, it’s a muddled one. As Indiana governor, he is known to have stonewalled public records requests, often delaying their release of denying them entirely.

He also found himself rebuked by free speech advocates because of a widely criticized plan to create a taxpayer-funded news service, and because his staff deleted Facebook comments that disagreed with his stance on same-sex marriage.

To this day, a Facebook page called Pencership exists.

In March, news broke that Pence, also while governor, used his personal email account while conducting state business. The Indianapolis Star first reported it following a months-long effort to access emails from Pence’s AOL account.

Around the same time, Pence sat through the jokes and musical skits that targeted Trump and his advisers’ headline-making contacts with Russia at the annual dinner of the Gridiron Club, an elite group of 65 of Washington’s top journalists. He attended the swanky but lighthearted affair in Trump’s place after Trump declined.

As in other instances, Pence said at the dinner that he and the president “support the freedom of the press enshrined in the First Amendment.”

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The Trump White House’s dangerously authoritarian response to criticism

The following article by Aaron Blake was posted on the Washington Post website October 10, 2017:

Vice President Pence left the NFL game between the Indianapolis Colts and the San Francisco 49ers on Oct. 8 as several 49ers players knelt in protest during the national anthem. (Amber Ferguson/The Washington Post)

This post has been updated with Bannon’s comments Monday night.

President Trump, as the White House will often remind us, is a counterpuncher. You hit him; he hits back twice as hard. You bring a knife; he brings a bazooka. Continue reading “The Trump White House’s dangerously authoritarian response to criticism”

Trump fundraising off Pence’s NFL walkout

The following article by Olivia Beavers was posted on the Hill website October 9, 2017:

© Getty Images

President Trump is fundraising off of Vice President Pence’s dramatic walkout from an Indianapolis Colts game on Sunday, when several San Francisco 49ers kneeled during “The Star-Spangled Banner.”

“Yesterday members of the San Francisco 49ers took a knee during our National Anthem. Their stunt showed the world that they don’t believe our flag is worth standing for,” the president said Monday in an email from the Trump Make America Great Again Committee. Continue reading “Trump fundraising off Pence’s NFL walkout”

Trump’s Voter Fraud Panel Remains Lightning Rod

The following article by Jonathan Miller was posted on the Roll Call website September 11, 2017:

Some see commission as Washington’s most dangerous advisory board

President Donald Trump, flanked by Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach and Vice President Mike Pence speaks during the first meeting of the Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity in Washington in July. (Mark Wilson/Getty Images File Photo)

If anyone in Washington was wondering just how seriously Democrats were taking a presidential advisory commission tasked with finding voter fraud, the answer came in late August, when Senate Minority Leader Charles E. Schumer compared the commission with the white supremacists and neo-Nazis who clashed with counterprotesters in Charlottesville, Virginia, earlier in the month.

“If the president wants to truly show that he rejects the discrimination agenda of the white supremacist movement, he will rescind the Executive Order that created this commission,” the New York Democrat wrote in a post on Medium.com. He added that the commission was “a ruse,” whose “only intention is to disenfranchise voters.”

But that was not all. Schumer drew a line in the sand by warning that he would seek to attach riders to important bills coming up in Congress this month to block the commission: “If the president does not act, the Congress should prohibit its operation through one of the must-pass legislative vehicles in September,” he wrote. That could include a host of measures, such as a children’s health care program, a flood insurance reauthorization program and a bill for the Federal Aviation Administration.

Continue reading “Trump’s Voter Fraud Panel Remains Lightning Rod”

Trump voting commission allegedly uses personal email for government business

The following article by Kira Lerner was posted on the Think Progress website September 6, 2017:

Where have we heard this before?

VICE PRESIDENT MIKE PENCE, LEFT, ACCOMPANIED BY VICE-CHAIR KANSAS SECRETARY OF STATE KRIS KOBACH, RIGHT, SPEAKS DURING THE FIRST MEETING OF THE PRESIDENTIAL ADVISORY COMMISSION ON ELECTION INTEGRITY AT THE EISENHOWER EXECUTIVE OFFICE BUILDING ON THE WHITE HOUSE COMPLEX IN WASHINGTON, WEDNESDAY, JULY 19, 2017. CREDIT: AP PHOTO/ANDREW HARNIK

Plaintiffs in a lawsuit against President Trump’s voting commission are alleging that co-chair Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach (R) and other commissioners are committing the same offense that haunted Hillary Clinton’s campaign for the presidency: using private email for government business.

In a court filing Tuesday, the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law claims that members of the commission “have been using personal email accounts rather than federal government systems to conduct Commission work.” The complaint alleges that use of non-government email would violate the Presidential Records Act.

“Defendants’ counsel further stated they did not yet have any settled plan for how they would collect emails from these personal, non-federal government systems, or even who would conduct the searches,” the filing notes, adding that it’s “critically important” that the emails from personal accounts are logged in the same way as government emails. Continue reading “Trump voting commission allegedly uses personal email for government business”

Kris Kobach and Kansas’ SAFE Act

The following article by Chelsie Bright was posted on the Conversation website July 27, 2017:

A Kansas voter prepares to cast her ballot – and prove her identity – in the 2014 midterm elections. AP Photo/Charlie Riedel

If you want to understand President Donald Trump’s voter fraud commission, it helps to study what happened in Kansas.

Six years before Trump was tweeting about stolen electionsand unsubstantiated claims of millions of fraudulent votes, Kris Kobach, the Kansas secretary of state, was promoting the idea that widespread voter fraud threatens the integrity of our electoral system.

It should come as no surprise that Trump chose Kobach to be the vice chairman of Vice President Mike Pence’s new Commission on Election Integrity. This appointment gives Kobach a national platform by which to pursue his agenda.

Kansas’ voter ID law went into effect when I was a graduate student at the University of Kansas. The pervasive campaign promoting the new law piqued my interest. My co-author and I set out to assess the impact advertisements – specifically, the “Got ID?” campaign – had on voter turnout during the 2012 election. Continue reading “Kris Kobach and Kansas’ SAFE Act”

Pence’s voter fraud commission will almost certainly ‘find’ thousands of duplicate registrations that aren’t duplicates. Here’s why.

The following article by Stephen Pettigrew and Mayya Komisarchik was posted on the Washington Post website July 27, 2017:

Donald Trump and Mike Pence, CBS screen grab

Did Vice President Pence commit voter fraud?

You might think so, if you looked at voter registration data that only includes each voter’s name and birth year. Mike Pence registered to vote eight times and cast seven ballots across six states in the November 2016 election.

But you would be wrong. Each of these registration records belongs to a different person. Their only crime is that they share their name and were born in the same year as the vice president. Continue reading “Pence’s voter fraud commission will almost certainly ‘find’ thousands of duplicate registrations that aren’t duplicates. Here’s why.”

First meeting of Trump’s voting commission makes clear that suppression is the goal

The following article by Kira Lerner was posted on the ThinkProgress website July 19, 2017:

Yet Mike Pence claims the panel has “no preconceived notions.”

Vice President Mike Pence claimed during the first meeting on Wednesday of the White House’s Commission on Election Integrity that the group will go about its work with “no preconceived notions.” Just minutes later, commissioners took turns insisting there is mass fraud across the country that could influence elections.

Kansas Secretary of State and commission co-chair Kris Kobach claimed in his introduction that as many as 18,000 non-citizens could be registered to vote in Kansas, without mentioning the shady math and questionable studieshe used to arrive at that number. The Heritage Foundation’s Hans von Spakovsky insisted that massive fraud is occurring across the country. And even New Hampshire Secretary of State Bill Garder, a Democratic commissioner, argued against making voting easier, saying it doesn’t require a massive amount of fraud to influence elections. Continue reading “First meeting of Trump’s voting commission makes clear that suppression is the goal”

Conservative women’s group knocked for giving ‘Working for Women’ award to Pence

The following article by Vanessa Williams was posted on the Washington Post website March 22, 2017:

Vice President Pence will be honored by the Independent Women’s Forum at a reception in Washington. (David Swanson/The Philadelphia Inquirer via AP)

This post has been updated.

The Independent Women’s Forum, a conservative think tank, has drawn fire on social media and from some progressive commentators for its decision to give its inaugural “Working for Women” award to Vice President Pence.

Pence was scheduled to receive the award at a reception Wednesday, but the forum issued an advisory Wednesday afternoon saying that it had “just been informed by the office of the Vice President that due to current events and scheduling the Vice President will no longer be able to attend the reception.” The group said it would find a later date to give Pence the award. The advisory said that Kelleyanne Conway, counselor to President Trump and a member of the organization’s board of directors, might attend. Continue reading “Conservative women’s group knocked for giving ‘Working for Women’ award to Pence”

Pence fought against releasing records as Indiana governor

The following article by Brian Slodysko was posted on the Associated Press website March 3, 2017:

Vice President Mike Pence pauses while speaking before administering the oath of office to Energy Secretary Rick Perry, left, Thursday, March 2, 2017, in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House complex in Washington. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

Vice President Mike Pence repeatedly stonewalled media requests to view public records when he was Indiana’s governor, including emails about state business distributed from a private AOL account that was hacked last year.

Revelations Pence used the account to discuss homeland security and other official matters, first reported Thursday by the Indianapolis Star, are just the latest in a series of transparency battles involving the Republican’s tenure as governor.

The Star obtained the AOL emails through an open records request after new Republican Gov. Eric Holcomb agreed to release 29 pages from his predecessor’s AOL account. The Associated Press filed a similar records request last July seeking the emails and followed up with a complaint against the governor’s office in January when there was no response. Continue reading “Pence fought against releasing records as Indiana governor”