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Trump postpones naming running mate

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump left the Indiana Governor’s residence with Gov. Mike Pence in Indianapolis on Wednesday.

Donald Trump’s presidential campaign signaled strongly today that he would name Gov. Mike Pence of Indiana as his running mate, but abruptly postponed a long-planned unveiling of the Republican ticket after an attack that left dozens dead in France.

Trump said on Twitter that he was delaying his announcement after the “horrible attack” in Nice. He did not specify when the event would go forward.

Before the attack in southern France, Pence, a mild-mannered Midwesterner popular with conservatives and evangelical Christians, appeared to be all but locked in as the Republican nominee for vice president — the last man standing after a madcap selection process unlike any in recent presidential politics.

But a certain resolution to the process remained elusive after several days of unusually frenzied and public deliberations by Trump and his family, as well as extraordinarily overt campaigning for the job by several potential running mates. After huddling with Pence in Indiana, flying multiple other candidates to Indianapolis for last-minute interviews, hinting to party leaders that his decision had been made and then frantically denying it to the news media, Trump delayed his decision entirely.

In a television interview, Trump insisted that he had not settled on a running mate yet. “I haven’t made my final, final decision,” he told Fox News, speaking by telephone.

Against a backdrop of images from Nice, Trump repeatedly described himself as the “law-and-order candidate” in the presidential race.

Trump’s advisers told national Republican officials that they were preparing to make an announcement with Pence, and people close to Pence notified his political allies that they expected him to be chosen, according to numerous people with knowledge of the conversations, who were not authorized to discuss them publicly.

This afternoon, television stations in Indiana and New York reported that Pence had flown from Indiana to Teterboro Airport in New Jersey, arriving late in the afternoon for the planned Friday morning event in Midtown Manhattan.

A former congressman and radio host, Pence emerged over the last week as the strong favorite of Trump’s political advisers and senior officials in the Republican Party. He addressed a rally in Indiana alongside Trump on Tuesday night and met privately with him several times.

But Trump himself has sent conflicting signals in recent days, as he has subjected his potential running mates to a final round of screening. As of today, he had not yet formally invited Pence to join his ticket, nor had he notified two other contenders, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Gov. Chris Christie of New Jersey, of his decision, according to people with direct knowledge of the process.

Trump has appeared to vacillate over his choice. Long accustomed to making important strategic decisions by sheer improvisation, he is now faced with the most permanent, and perhaps most important, decision of the campaign.

The delay has the potential to complicate a partnership with Pence, who must file papers in Indiana by noon on Friday withdrawing from his re-election campaign in order for Republicans to field a new candidate for the race.

A low-key man largely defined in public life by his Christian faith, Pence, 57, is seen as a cautious choice — a political partner who is unlikely to embarrass Trump, and who may help him shore up support among conservative voters still wary of his candidacy.

Pence’s staunch conservative views on certain social issues, like gay rights and abortion, may inject a new set of concerns into the general election debate that have been largely overlooked with Trump at the top of the Republican ticket.

Republicans on Capitol Hill spoke approvingly of Pence on today: He is seen among his former colleagues there as a conventional politician with standard-issue conservative beliefs, including on some subjects where his policy instincts plainly conflict with Trump’s.

Pence has endorsed free-trade agreements, including the Trans-Pacific Partnership, an Asian trade deal that Trump has described as a “rape” of the American economy. As a House member, Pence also voted for the Iraq War, which Trump has condemned, and last winter he denounced Trump’s call to ban all Muslim immigration into the United States.

If those views place Pence at odds with Trump, they are in line with the outlook of Republican leaders in Congress.

“It’s no secret I’m a big fan of Mike Pence’s,” said Paul D. Ryan, the speaker of the House from Wisconsin. “We’re very good friends. I have very high regard for him. I hope that he picks a good movement conservative. Clearly, Mike is one of those.”

The Senate majority leader, Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said picking Pence would be a “good move by Donald Trump.” McConnell, who has sharply rebuked Trump in recent weeks for his indiscipline on the campaign trail, said he would “look forward to enthusiastically supporting the ticket.”

To Democrats, Pence cuts an unimposing profile, and party officials said Thursday they considered him unlikely to transform Trump’s deeply unpopular public image. On the contrary, his archconservative social views could help motivate liberal voters and young people to turn out for Hillary Clinton in the fall.

At the same time, Democrats have looked with some dismay at Trump’s tenacity in the Midwest, and at his unusual popularity with white men. Pence could reinforce Trump’s strengths in both areas.

The Senate minority leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., indicated that the focus of the fall campaign would be Trump himself.

“It’s not going to help him that much, no matter who he picks,” Reid said.

© 2016 The New York Times Company

3 responses to “Trump postpones naming running mate”

  1. keaukaha says:

    Zero plus zero equals zero.

    • lespark says:

      What’s in your wallet? Crooked Hilliary needs money not cheap comment to run more attack ads. If you believe in her please make a donation. They take credit cards, checks, pay pal. Wall Street is not returning her calls.

    • lespark says:

      I remember you, the person who flunked math. Just check the box. $100, $500, $1,000, $10,000. No need calculator.

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