

By Norman Solomon
Co-Founder and National Coordinator
RootsAction.org
If President Trump dies from the coronavirus that has killed more than 200,000 Americans largely due to his deliberate negligence, the man replacing him will be no less dangerous. While Mike Pence has eluded tough media scrutiny — in part because he exhibits such a low-key style in contrast to Trump — the pair has been a good fit for an administration that exemplifies the partnership of religious fundamentalism and corporate power.
The vice president, a former Indiana talk-show host who went on to become a six-term congressman and then governor, has described himself as โa Christian, a conservative, and a Republican, in that order.โ But he remains at cross-purposes with the biblical admonition (Matthew 6:24) that โyou cannot serve both God and money.โ Whether Pence has truly served God is a subjective matter, but his massive service to moneyโbig moneyโis incontrovertible.
Pence ranks high as a Christian soldier marching in lockstep with Trump on all major policy issues, a process that routinely puts business interests ahead of human lives. Whatever his personal piety might be, the results of Penceโs fidelity to right-wing agendas have further consolidated a de facto coalition of those seeking ever-lower taxes on wealth and corporations; denial of LGBTQ rights; a ban on abortion and severe restrictions on other reproductive rights; voter suppression and barriers to voting by people of color; obstruction of healthcare for low-income people; and on and on.
Pence embodies the political alliance of very conservative evangelical forces with anti-regulatory forces of corporatism. In the arenas of elections and governance, that coalition is the present-day Republican Party, dedicated to imposing the edicts of religious dogma, rolling back democratic reforms and serving the rich at the expense of everyone else.
โAs vice president, Mike Pence is doing everything in his power to control peopleโs bodies,โ the Planned Parenthood Action Fund declares. Meanwhile, those who are inclined toward racism or outright believers in white supremacy are bolstered. And Wall Street has never had a better friend in Washington.
Penceโs most consequential role during 44 months as vice president has been as chair of the White House Coronavirus Task Force. Since late February, he has functionedโin effectโas Trumpโs willing executioner, standing by and blowing smoke while Trump obfuscated and lied as the death toll kept mounting.
โThe truth is that weโve made great progress over the past four months,โ Pence proclaimed in a mid-June statement, โand itโs a testament to the leadership of President Trump.โ Pence charged that โthe media has taken to sounding the alarm bells over a โsecond waveโ of coronavirus infectionsโโbut โsuch panic is overblown.โ
To underscore his full devotion to Lord Trumpโs downplaying of the virus, the vice president concluded with a blame-the-messenger flourish: โThe truth is, whatever the media says, our whole-of-America approach has been a success. Weโve slowed the spread, weโve cared for the most vulnerable, weโve saved lives, and weโve created a solid foundation for whatever challenges we may face in the future. Thatโs a cause for celebration, not the mediaโs fear mongering.โ
Penceโs June 16 statement made its way into the Wall Street Journal as a prominent op-ed piece whistling past Covid graveyards. โIt was so clearly wrong back then and has turned out to be so clearly wrong since that I hope there’s some part of him that’s embarrassed,โ Ashish Jha, the head of the Harvard Global Health Institute, said in late summer. โI had already been seeing data for a good week that things were really heading in the wrong direction.โ The Washington Post editorial board immediately responded with a denunciation under the headline โMike Pence Is a Case Study in Irresponsibility.โ
No one with any discernment would associate Trump with religiosity because he held up a Bible at a photo op. But the other half of the ticket is a very different matter. Days after the November 2016 election, Jeremy Scahill wrote that Trump is โa Trojan horse for a cabal of vicious zealots who have long craved an extremist Christian theocracy, and Pence is one of its most prized warriors.โ
Scahill quoted an author of books on far-right fundamentalism, Jeff Sharlet, who said that โwhen they speak of business, theyโre speaking not of something separate from God, but theyโre speaking of what, in Mike Penceโs circles, would be called biblical capitalism, the idea that this economic system is God-ordained.โ
What does all this mean for progressives? The case of Mike Pence should be an ongoing urgent reminder thatโas toxic and truly evil as Donald Trump isโthe current president is a product and poisonous symptom of an inherently unjust and anti-democratic status quo.
Instead of focusing our rage on the persona of one destructive leader, we should remember that corporate domination provides an endless supply of destructive leaders. While they come and go, the system of corporate power remainsโand we must replace that system with genuine democracy.
Published by Common Dreams, 10.05.2020, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 license.
