CLEVELAND – Mike Pence quickly
accepted the Republican vice presidential nomination and then showed why
Donald Trump picked him as his running mate, harkening to his
Midwestern roots to appeal to GOP voters to unite against Hillary
Clinton – rallying the faithful ahead of Thursday night’s crowning of
Trump as the party standard-bearer.
The Indiana governor dubbed the presumptive
Democratic nominee “America’s secretary of the status quo,” and called
2016 a “time for choosing.”
His address was the rally point Republicans were
hoping would come from Trump’s ex-primary rival Ted Cruz, who faced
angry boos from the crowd Wednesday night as he stopped short of an
endorsement in his own prime-time speech.
Though Cruz congratulated Trump on his win, some
delegates prodded him toward the end to throw his support behind the
nominee, chanting “Trump, Trump” – Cruz paused, but closed his address
with no endorsement. Cruz urged Americans to vote their “conscience,”
without naming Trump.
Republican Party officials later told Fox News the speech was “classless.” One senior GOP operative said, "I'm speechless."
Technical glitches with the arena’s monitors also
created some problems. But Trump soon entered the arena, his son Eric
delivered a speech returning the focus to the party’s presidential
nominee – and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich delivered a rousing
address to set the stage for Pence.
Gingrich even effectively delivered an endorsement on
Cruz’s behalf. He told the restless crowd that since Cruz told
Americans to vote their conscience for anyone who can uphold the
Constitution, there’s only one choice.
“So, to paraphrase Ted Cruz,” Gingrich said, “if you
want to protect the Constitution of the United States, the only possible
candidate this fall is the Trump-Pence Republican ticket.”
Drawing a sharp contrast between Trump and Hillary
Clinton, Pence then echoed the message of party leaders the night
before: It’s Trump or Clinton in November, so pick a side.
“The choice couldn’t be more clear. Americans can
elect someone who literally personifies the failed establishment in
Washington, D.C., or we can choose a leader who will fight every day to
make America great again,” Pence said.
He added, “It’s change versus status quo, and my
fellow Republicans, when Donald Trump becomes president of the United
States of America the change will be huge.”
Pence appealed to voters Wednesday to “resolve here
and now that Hillary Clinton will never become president of the United
States of America.”
Calling Trump the “genuine article” and a “winner”
who “never backs down,” he also said Trump is the candidate to confront
radical Islam, cut taxes, grow the economy, shrink the bureaucracy,
enforce immigration law and appoint Supreme Court justices who will
uphold the Constitution.
While Pence, met with chants of “We like Mike,” made
an impassioned case for the billionaire businessman, all eyes were on
Cruz Wednesday night amid speculation over whether the Texas senator
would use the convention dais to formally endorse his former rival.
He didn’t. His only mention of Trump was to congratulate him.
It seemed toward the end he might be considering the
crowd’s noisy appeals, but he concluded by saying, “We will unite the
party, we will unite the country by standing together for shared values,
by standing for liberty.”
Still, his speech included a few nods to Trump’s
message, including a call to build a border wall. His appearance at all
on the Cleveland stage represented a reconciliation of sorts, and even
without an endorsement, he appealed to voters to get to the polls.
“To those listening, please, don’t stay home in
November,” he said. “If you love our country … stand and speak, and vote
your conscience, vote for candidates up and down the ticket who you
trust to defend our freedom and to be faithful to the Constitution.”
The carefully worded speech was delivered at a time
when Cruz is widely believed to be positioning himself for another
presidential run, be it four or eight years down the road. He is no
doubt mindful that a full-throated endorsement of Trump could haunt him
in the next cycle – and it seemed unlikely by Wednesday morning he would
deliver one, when Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort offered no
expectation of that happening.
The non-endorsement reflected the nastiness of their
own primary battle, one that saw Cruz and Trump square off all the way
into May in a rivalry replete with name-calling and trash-talk.
Some delegates in the convention hall remained loyal
to Cruz to the end, and he received the second-highest tally during the
formal nomination proceedings Tuesday night.
Cruz centered his remarks Wednesday around what he called a “return to freedom.”
“Freedom means that every human life is precious and
must be protected,” he said. “Freedom means Supreme Court Justices who
don’t dictate policy, but instead follow the Constitution.”
Afterward, delegate reaction was mixed. One North
Carolina delegate who spoke to FoxNews.com voiced disappointment with
how Cruz was treated.
A Texas delegate said Cruz “hurt” the party by not endorsing.
A source close to Cruz responded to GOP officials who criticized the non-endorsement.
"It's not classless to compliment Trump for winning,”
the source said. “It's not classless to highlight areas policy where
they can work together like border security, trade or fighting ISIS.
It's not classless to call on all his supporters to not stay home but
turnout."
Another ex-primary candidate Marco Rubio made a brief
appearance, via video message, right before Cruz spoke, saying, “The
time for fighting is over.”
Former 2016 candidate and Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker
spoke shortly before Rubio, with the message, “America deserves better
than Hillary Clinton.”