Panic is written all over Mike Pence’s every word.
He’s on CNN, shaking his head, warning about Ukraine, hinting at chaos inside Trump’s Pentagon — and still, the base barely blinks. He backs Trump on Putin, then scolds him over
“nation‑building,” trying to sound brave, principled, rele…
Mike Pence is walking a political tightrope with no safety net underneath. On one side is loyalty to the man he once served; on the other is a desperate bid to reclaim relevance in a party that has
largely moved on. His CNN remarks about the Ukraine weapons pause, framed as concern over a rogue Pentagon, were meant to project seriousness and experience. Instead, they highlighted how
little influence he now has over the movement that defines the GOP.
By criticizing Trump’s foreign speeches and warning against undermining America’s war on terror, Pence is appealing to an older Republican identity — one rooted in interventionism and
deference to institutions. But the MAGA base doesn’t want nostalgia; it wants defiance. Each careful jab at Trump only deepens his isolation, leaving Pence stranded between a party he no longer
leads and a populist revolution that never fully accepted him.