Former President Donald Trump told Mike Pence that he was "too honest" when he balked at the idea he could unilaterally sway the outcome of the 2020 election as Trump mounted an intense pressure campaign to bend Pence to his will, the former vice president writes in his upcoming memoir.
In "So Help Me God," to be published Tuesday, Pence offers not only his first extensive comments about his experiences with Trump after the election and during the Jan. 6, 2021, attack at the Capitol by a mob of Trump supporters, but also his first lengthy reflections on the 2016 campaign and the four years that followed.
Pence describes in detail Trump's efforts to pressure him into blocking congressional certification of Joe Biden's victory through the ceremonial role he would play on Jan. 6. Trump became preoccupied with the idea that Pence could do something, although Pence's chief lawyer had concluded that there was no legal authority for him to act on Trump's behalf.
He writes that questions about whether there had been election fraud were swirling around Trump's advisers early on. "Jared Kushner called me that day for advice," he writes about the Saturday after the election. "He asked if I thought that fraud had taken place in the election." Pence writes that he replied that there was likely some fraud in the election but he doubted it was why they lost.
Trump, Pence writes, tried various means of pressuring him, including mentioning that Pence was trending on Twitter in connection with speculation about what he would do. "If you want to be popular," Trump said, suggesting that he should not take part in the certification at all, "don't do it."
By the first days of 2021, when Rep. Louis Gohmert, R-Texas, sued to try to force Pence to declare the winner of the election, Trump was upset that his vice president opposed the suit.
"You're too honest," Trump said, according to Pence, who recounts Trump telling him that "hundreds of thousands are gonna hate your guts" and "people are gonna think you're stupid."
Pence describes in the book how Trump worked with lawyer John Eastman to press him into doing something that the vice president was clear that he could not and would not do. He writes that on the morning of Jan. 6, Trump twisted the knife again in a phone call.