Erika Ayers Badan: Navigating Internal Transitions At Work
Erika Ayers Badan gives advice and direction for navigating internal transitions at work.
Thought Leader: Erika Ayers Badan
Former President Donald Trump heads to Iowa next weekend, which will only generate more speculation about whether he will follow through on repeated flirtations by launching a 2024 Republican presidential bid to try and return to the White House.
But a week before Trump’s rally at the Iowa State Fairgrounds in Des Moines, former Vice President Mike Pence grabbed some attention from his former boss as he announced an upcoming return trip to the state whose caucuses for a half century have kicked off the nominating calendar in the race for the White House.
The Young America’s Foundation (YAF) announced on Friday that Pence “will kick off his YAF campus lecture tour at the University of Iowa on November 1!”
The former vice president announced a few weeks after the end of the Trump Administration that he was entering into a partnership with the well-known half-century old conservative youth organization.
The trip to Iowa will be Pence’s second this year. He spent a jam packed day in the Hawkeye State in July, which included taking aim at President Biden’s administration and showcasing his social conservative credentials as he addressed the 10th annual Family Leadership Summit, which is hosted by the Family Leader, a top, Iowa-based social conservative organization of evangelicals. Pence started his day headlining a fundraiser in northwest Iowa for GOP Rep. Randy Feenstra, and later he met with other leading Iowa Republican leaders and activists.
The former vice president’s July visit followed high profile stops earlier this year in New Hampshire – the state that’s held the first presidential primary for a century and which votes second after Iowa in the nominating calendar – and South Carolina, which holds the first southern primary and votes third in the Republican calendar. The trips to the early voting presidential primary and caucus states naturally fuel more speculation about Pence making a 2024 White House run.
Pence has been crisscrossing the country this year, helping raise money and campaign for Republicans running in the 2022 midterm elections. His latest stop was Oregon, where he keynoted a Washington County GOP fundraising dinner on Saturday night in suburban Portland.
WHAT PENCE SAID ABOUT A POSSIBLE 2024 PRESIDENTIAL RUN
A few days earlier Pence hosted a well-attended office opening in the nation’s capital for Advancing American Freedom, the nonprofit organization he launched earlier this year. At the event, Pence sat down for an interview with the hosts of the lively conservative “Ruthless” podcast. Besides breaking out an imitation of longtime GOP Senate leader Mitch McConnell, the former vice president said that when it comes to his political future there has to be a “calling” for him to run for office rather than him “seeking” it.
Trump remains the overwhelming front runner in all of the extremely early polls in the 2024 Republican presidential nomination race. But in hypothetical questions with Trump not on the ballot, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Pence top the large field of potential contenders in most surveys.
Erika Ayers Badan: Navigating Internal Transitions At Work
Erika Ayers Badan gives advice and direction for navigating internal transitions at work.
Thought Leader: Erika Ayers Badan
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