Pence refused to sign on to Jan 6 plan to steal election
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@taiwan_girl said in Pence refused to sign on to Jan 6 plan to steal election:
The best for the US is when things are split in the power. Maybe not as much gets done, but what does get done is more towards the center than any extreme.
I just love you to pieces, TG. Wiser words were never spoke here.
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Here's another thought experiment for you Trump-won-yes-he-DIDsters to chew on.
Say a miracle happens, and one of Trump's many machinations actually works to put him back in office. (I know, but just pretend.)
Do you have any idea how much work of the transition has already been done to this point? Not just in DC, but all over the country? Hundreds, maybe thousands, of upper and lower level public employees have already left or are actively searching for jobs elsewhere (though many are permanent despite the new administration's party). Not just the employees, but their spouses also being involved in relocation challenges, their kids exiting schools, and so on.
And things like preparing Biden's official portrait, preparing the new presidential stationary, and hundreds of other tasks, large and small.
Then suddenly it's oops, we goofed, and Trump is back in. Can you imagine the chaos?
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@catseye3 said in Pence refused to sign on to Jan 6 plan to steal election:
Hundreds, maybe thousands, of upper and lower level public employees have already left or are actively searching for jobs elsewhere
Why would a lower-level public employee need a new job when the POTUS changes? I assume it's mainly the top two or three layers of the hierarchy that are affected by this.
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@klaus said in Pence refused to sign on to Jan 6 plan to steal election:
Why would a lower-level public employee need a new job when the POTUS changes? I assume it's mainly the top two or three layers of the hierarchy that are affected by this.
Yes, but with a bureacracy this huge, those layers can be complicated to determine.
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@xenon said in Pence refused to sign on to Jan 6 plan to steal election:
Am I taking crazy pills? How is this not the biggest political scandal/blunder in the last 100 years? A sitting president making this type of statement to throw out an election he lost?
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@89th said in Pence refused to sign on to Jan 6 plan to steal election:
Am I taking crazy pills? How is this not the biggest political scandal/blunder in the last 100 years? A sitting president making this type of statement to throw out an election he lost?
Trump supporters here say it's obvious we shouldn't trust the election result, but they expect us to trust this guy?
What on earth has he done to earn anybody's trust?
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@catseye3 said in Pence refused to sign on to Jan 6 plan to steal election:
Here's another thought experiment for you Trump-won-yes-he-DIDsters to chew on.
Say a miracle happens, and one of Trump's many machinations actually works to put him back in office. (I know, but just pretend.)
Do you have any idea how much work of the transition has already been done to this point? Not just in DC, but all over the country? Hundreds, maybe thousands, of upper and lower level public employees have already left or are actively searching for jobs elsewhere (though many are permanent despite the new administration's party). Not just the employees, but their spouses also being involved in relocation challenges, their kids exiting schools, and so on.
And things like preparing Biden's official portrait, preparing the new presidential stationary, and hundreds of other tasks, large and small.
Then suddenly it's oops, we goofed, and Trump is back in. Can you imagine the chaos?
I can't see it being that big of a deal. Happens all the time.
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I feel sorry for VP Pence. Lol
I think he thought he was going to get through this, and be ready for 2024. Now, no matter what he does heโs going to make someone upset. Iโm sure heโs deciding which side is worse to make upset
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I don't know what 'lane' he fancies himself to be in, but I see his best shot as a compromise candidate if neither the leading Trumpy folks nor the leading establishment folks can eek out a lead.
In which case, he's probably doing the right thing. Being vocal about supporting the Senate attempt while saying 'sorry my hands are tied' with respect to his own role.
(Of course if Trump runs in 24, it would be '28 I'm talking about.)