It’s Fun That “the President Reportedly Agreed That a Mob Should Kill the Vice President” Is Only a Minor News Story

Authored by slate.com and submitted by koavf
image for It’s Fun That “the President Reportedly Agreed That a Mob Should Kill the Vice President” Is Only a Minor News Story

On Jan. 6, 2021, after a pro-Trump mob overwhelmed police at the U.S. Capitol and broke into the building, Vice President Mike Pence was taken into hiding by the Secret Service. While this was happening, Donald Trump wrote a tweet attacking Pence (you may remember that Pence had upset Trump by upholding his responsibility to certify the results of the presidential election in a joint session of Congress):

Mike Pence didn’t have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our Country and our Constitution, giving States a chance to certify a corrected set of facts, not the fraudulent or inaccurate ones which they were asked to previously certify. USA demands the truth!

I had to copy and paste that text rather than embed the tweet, because it is no longer online. Twitter suspended and removed Trump—the president!—from its service after more or less concluding that he was using it to try to overthrow the government.

This all looked pretty bad in the moment. It looks even worse now! One of the details that emerged from the Capitol that day is that some of the people in the mob said they were looking for Pence; a number of them took part in an unnervingly intense “HANG MIKE PENCE” chant. Trump has since defended this behavior, and Politico reported Wednesday that according to testimony given to the House’s Jan. 6 committee, he approved of the idea of killing Pence at the time, too:

The White House chief of staff at the time, Mark Meadows, was in the dining room off the Oval Office with Trump at one point during last year’s Capitol attack, the committee has been told. Meadows then left the dining room and informed other people nearby that Trump had signaled a positive view of the prospect of hanging the vice president, the panel heard.

This is a tortured description of a thirdhand account, so it’s not clear exactly how much thought and specificity Trump put into his comments. We know from experience that he will kind of nod along and claim to be “strongly looking into” nearly anything that anyone suggests to him. It may not be prosecutorially actionable evidence of conspiracy to commit murder.

On the other hand, you have to admit: It’s messed up! And it’s also messed up that this revelation is so unsurprising that Politico’s story about it is not (currently) among the top five most-read on its website.

usatovo on May 26th, 2022 at 00:46 UTC »

Trump: No, I thought he was well protected, and I had heard that he was in good shape. No. Because I had heard he was in very good shape. But, but, no, I think—

Karl: Because you heard those chants—that was terrible. I mean—

Trump: He could have—well, the people were very angry.

Karl: They were saying “hang Mike Pence.”

Trump: Because it’s common sense, Jon. It’s common sense that you’re supposed to protect. How can you—if you know a vote is fraudulent, right?—how can you pass on a fraudulent vote to Congress? How can you do that?

The former President of the USA in an interview with Jonathan Karl on March 18, 2021. It’s “common sense” to want to execute a public official for doing their job. Unreal.

PS how is Matt Gaetz still free and serving in Congress???

Eudemocrat on May 25th, 2022 at 21:56 UTC »

He called for a civil war a few days ago and it was only a minor news story.

_Xelum_ on May 25th, 2022 at 21:23 UTC »

Look, now isn't the time to politicize this. We have lots of other problems we created to ignore at this time.

GOP