on January 20, 2017 Soon after the election, he was appointed chairman of President-elect Trump's transition team. During the transition phase of the
Trump administration, Pence was reported as holding a large degree of influence in the administration due to his roles as a mediator between Trump and congressional Republicans, for reassuring conservatives about Trump's conservative credentials, and his influence in determining
Donald Trump's cabinet. On January 20, 2017, at noon, Pence became the 48th
vice president of the United States,
sworn into the office by justice
Clarence Thomas. Pence became the first vice president to be sworn in by an African-American justice of the Supreme Court.
Tenure On the first day in office (January 20), Pence performed various ceremonial duties, including swearing in
Jim Mattis as
United States secretary of defense and
John Kelly as
secretary of homeland security. He also administered the oath of office to the
White House senior staff on January 22, 2017. Pence also sat in on calls made by President Trump to foreign heads of government and state such as Russian president
Vladimir Putin and
Australian prime minister Malcolm Turnbull. In January, Pence appointed
Josh Pitcock as his chief of staff, whom he had known from his
gubernatorial and
congressional days. The following month, Jarrod Agen was tapped as deputy assistant to the president and director of communications to the vice president; his previous job being chief of staff for
governor of Michigan Rick Snyder through the time of the
Flint water crisis. In July, Pitcock stepped down as chief of staff, and was succeeded in the position by
Nick Ayers, another longtime Pence advisor. On February 5, 2017, Pence warned
Iran "not to test the resolve" of the new
Trump administration following their
ballistic missile tests. On February 7, 2017, Pence, in his dual constitutional role as president of the
United States Senate made the first ever tie-breaking vote to confirm a
Cabinet member. He cast the deciding vote to break a fifty-fifty tie to confirm
Betsy DeVos as the
secretary of education. Pence cast his second tie-breaking vote on March 30, voting to advance a bill to defund
Planned Parenthood. In 2018, Pence broke a tie to confirm
Jonathan A. Kobes for the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit. This was the first-ever tie-breaking vote to confirm a judicial nominee in U.S. history. In total, Pence cast 13
tie-breaking votes, the seventh-most in history and more than the previous four predecessors combined. (By comparison, his successor,
Kamala Harris, cast a total of 33 tie-breaking votes, the most by any senate president, and more than the previous six predecessors combined.) In April, Pence made a tour of the Asia-Pacific region. In
South Korea, he met acting president
Hwang Kyo-ahn and condemned
North Korea's
latest missile launch. In Japan, Pence met Prime Minister
Shinzō Abe and pledged to work with Japan, South Korea, and China "to achieve a peaceable resolution and the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula," adding "The era of strategic patience is over and while all options are on the table." Pence subsequently traveled to
Jakarta, Indonesia, where he met with president
Joko Widodo, toured the largest mosque in the region (the
Istiqlal Mosque), and praised moderate Islam. Pence ended his trip with stops in
Sydney, Australia (where, after meeting with Malcolm Turnbull, he said the U.S. "intends to honor" a U.S.–Australia refugee resettlement agreement),
Oahu, Hawaii, and
American Samoa. On May 21, 2017, Pence delivered the commencement address at the
University of Notre Dame. Traditionally, the president delivers the address at Notre Dame in his inaugural year, but in 2017 Pence was invited instead when Trump decided to speak at
Liberty University. , and Major General Courtney P. Carr stand for the national anthem. On June 30, 2017, Pence was appointed chair of the
National Space Council after Trump signed an executive order reestablishing the council. As chair, Pence held eight meetings from 2017 to 2020. On October 8, 2017, Pence walked out of a game between the
NFL's
Indianapolis Colts and
San Francisco 49ers after members of the 49ers
knelt during the national anthem. Shortly afterwards, Pence commented via
Twitter, "President Trump and I will not dignify any event that disrespects our soldiers, our Flag, or our
national anthem," adding, "While everyone is entitled to their own opinion, I don't think it's too much to ask NFL players to respect the flag and our national anthem." Pence was widely criticized by various people for what was considered a publicity stunt. Democratic representative
Adam Schiff (CA-28) questioned how much taxpayer's money was used to fund Pence's actions, and CNN later estimated that the total cost of his eight hours of travel on
Air Force Two to attend the game was about $242,500, not including ground transportation and security.
49ers safety
Eric Reid (the second NFL player after
Colin Kaepernick to participate in the protests) told reporters it was predictable that Pence would walk out, knowing that most of the team were protesting. Sportswriter
Peter King wrote that the furor surrounding Pence had overshadowed
Peyton Manning, who was being honored by the Colts, saying, "Pence trumped a day that belonged to the greatest football hero the state of Indiana has ever seen, and he did it for political purposes... he stole Manning's last great day as a Colt. [He] will have to live with himself for that." at the 2018 Winter Olympics On February 1, 2018, it was announced that Pence would lead the presidential delegation to the
2018 Winter Olympics, alongside his wife. Much of Pence's time at
Pyeongchang was affected by the ongoing
North Korean crisis. Prior to the
opening ceremony, on February 9, Pence skipped on a dinner held by South Korean president
Moon Jae-in, as he would have shared a table with North Korea's ceremonial head of state
Kim Yong-nam. Instead, he met with four North Korean defectors in
Pyeongtaek, alongside his special guest, Fred Warmbier (the father of
Otto Warmbier, who was arrested in North Korea for attempted theft, and sentenced to 15 years' imprisonment, before returning to the U.S. in a comatose state). At the ceremony, the Pences were seated in front of the North Korean delegates, and when North and South Korean athletes entered during the Parade of Athletes, they chose to stay seated, which prompted critics to accuse Pence of
hypocrisy in regard to the NFL protests. Pence was supposed to meet with the North Koreans on February 10, but they pulled out at the last day. on
ISIL leader
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi on October 26, 2019 Over the next few months, the North Koreans started communicating more with their neighbors, as Supreme Leader
Kim Jong-un secretly met with Chinese paramount leader
Xi Jinping in March and then Moon Jae-in in an historic
inter-Korean summit in April, and around the same time, a
meeting between Trump and Kim was also proposed. On May 10, Pence accompanied Trump to
Andrews Air Force Base as three American citizens were released by North Korea, and in an early morning interview with
ABC's
Jonathan Karl, he said seeing the men back on American soil "was really one of the greatest joys of my life". Talks broke down later that month following comments made by Pence and Trump, comparing the situation to events in Libya
seven years previous, despite their voluntary disarmament of nuclear weapons in 2003. North Korean vice foreign minister
Choe Son-hui called Pence's remarks "ignorant and stupid". On May 24, Trump abruptly called off the summit with Pence in attendance, later announcing that it would still be scheduled to
take place on June 12 in Singapore. In October 2018, Pence gave a speech regarding China at the
Hudson Institute, accusing China of predatory economic practices, military aggression, and trying to undermine President Trump. He said China "wants a different American president" and accused the country of meddling in U.S. elections. He said China was building "an unparalleled surveillance state" to suppress minorities, and accused it of engaging in "
debt-trap diplomacy". In regards to Taiwan, he said "while our administration will continue to respect our One China Policy … Taiwan's embrace of democracy shows a better path for all the Chinese people".
The New York Times wrote the speech, with a tone much more hawkish than what U.S. officials previously used regarding China, was similar to a declaration of a
new Cold War. and fellow
Hoosier Dan Quayle and
Marilyn Quayle with Pence in 2019 In September 2019, Pence attended official meetings with
Irish prime minister Leo Varadkar in
Dublin, Ireland but stayed at President Trump's resort in Doonbeg, away. Pence's schedule included four hours spent in transit in one day, and two flights on
Air Force Two before the end of the next day. Costs for the limousine service alone totaled $599,000 according to State Department receipts, compared to President Obama's three-day trip to Dublin with the same limousine company totaling $114,000. In February 2020, Pence defended debt- and deficit-spending as a measure to stimulate economic growth.
Political action committee In May 2017, Pence filed
Federal Election Commission paperwork to form
Great America Committee, a
political action committee (PAC) that would be headed by his former campaign staffers
Nick Ayers and Marty Obst. Pence is the only vice president to have started his own PAC while still in office. Pence denied a
New York Times article's allegations that he would run for president in 2020, calling them "laughable and absurd", and said the article was "disgraceful and offensive".
Pence and the Trump impeachment inquiry Pence was a key player in the
Trump–Ukraine scandal and the
Trump impeachment inquiry. Pence had at least two phone conversations and an in-person meeting with
Volodymyr Zelensky,
President of Ukraine. Pence met with Zelensky in Poland on September 1, 2019, during an unexpected delay in U.S. military aid to Ukraine. Pence later told the press that he did not mention
2020 presidential candidate and former vice president
Joe Biden to Zelensky, but raised issues regarding
Ukrainian corruption. After the inquiry was opened, Pence publicly stated his support of Trump's call for foreign investigation into Joe Biden and his son
Hunter, saying, "I think the American people have a right to know if the vice president of the United States or his family profited from his position." On October 3, Pence stated, "My predecessor had a son who was paid $50,000 a month to be on a Ukrainian board at the time that Vice President Biden was leading the Obama administration's efforts in Ukraine, I think [that] is worth looking into."
Death of Soleimani Pence defended Trump's decision in January 2020 to
assassinate the Iranian major general in the
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC)
Qasem Soleimani, promoting conspiracy theories that supposedly linked the
al-Qaeda attacks on the United States to Iran. In a series of
tweets, the vice president termed Soleimani "an evil man who was responsible for killing thousands of Americans". Pence insisted Soleimani had "assisted in the clandestine travel to Afghanistan of 10 of the 12 terrorists who carried out the
September 11 terrorist attacks", which critics said was his confusing the number of 9/11 hijackers (actually 19) and insinuating (without evidence) that the general was involved. Many experts responded that Pence's claims were unsubstantiated. Pence's spokeswoman
Katie Waldman said that the dozen terrorists Pence referred to were those who had traveled through Afghanistan, ten of whom "were assisted by Soleimani".
COVID-19 pandemic brief the media in March 2020. On February 26, 2020, President Trump named Pence as the leader of the
White House Coronavirus Task Force to combat the spread of the
COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. Various public health officials and members of Congress had suggested the selection of a "Coronavirus Czar", though Trump said that would not be the title's name. As the leader of the task force, Pence coordinated efforts with the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
Department of Health and Human Services,
National Institutes of Health,
Department of Homeland Security, and
White House Office. In April 2020, Pence exempted himself from the
Mayo Clinic's policy of wearing a
face mask in the hospital during a visit. Pence defended his action, saying he needed to look staff "in the eye". The next day, the vice president's opponents criticized him for promoting "completely irresponsible public health messaging". Later, Pence acknowledged he should have worn a mask during the hospital visit, and did so two days later when visiting a
ventilator production facility. In late June 2020, as coronavirus cases were spiking, Pence gave an optimistic press briefing where he made several misleading and false claims about the state of the coronavirus pandemic. He misleadingly argued that surges in cases were the result of increased testing, telling reporters that increases in new cases were "a reflection of a great success in expanding testing across the country". Pence also falsely claimed that coronavirus fatalities were declining all across the country (Statistics
here), that the curve had been flattened, and that all 50 states were opening up. On December 18, the Pences received the
Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for SARS-CoV-2, in front of a live audience at a televised event to show Americans that the vaccine is safe and effective.
2020 vice presidential election Ahead of his
presidential campaign on February 28, 2019, former vice president
Joe Biden referred to Pence as a "decent guy" in a speech in
Omaha, Nebraska, when making an anecdote about an audience falling silent after Pence mentioned Trump's name. Biden later faced criticism for his complimentary remarks due to Pence's alleged anti-LGBT positions, which Biden would later apologize for and clarify by saying, "I was making a point in a foreign policy context, that under normal circumstances a Vice President wouldn't be given a silent reaction on the world stage." Biden had previously referred to Pence as a "decent guy" in 2018, and Pence and Biden exchanged conversations via phone before Pence's 2017 transition into the vice presidency. In June 2019, the Democratic former New York City Council president
Andrew Stein opined that Trump could improve his re-election chances by replacing Pence as his running mate with former
South Carolina governor and former
United States ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley. Despite that, Trump said Pence will be his running mate. He declined to endorse Pence should his running mate seek
in 2024 to succeed him, but said he would give it "very strong consideration". In remarks about law enforcement during the
2020 Republican convention, Pence said a federal security officer, Dave Underwood, "was shot and killed during the riots in Oakland", implying he was killed by rioters, when instead a man linked to the far-right
Boogaloo movement had exploited the unrest as a cover for murder. On October 7, 2020, Pence participated in a debate with
Kamala Harris that was held by
USA Today in Salt Lake City, Utah, and moderated by
Susan Page, the Washington bureau chief of the newspaper. The debate was held with adaptations designed to avoid contagion of the
COVID-19 virus given that the vice president had been in close contact with people who had been infected at a recent event
at the White House. Plexiglas partitions separated the candidates and masks were required for all attending except the candidates and moderator. By some estimates, Pence interrupted Harris twice as much as she interrupted him. Media outlets noted that near the end of the debate, a fly landed on Pence's head for almost two minutes. A CNN poll found that 59% of registered voters felt that Harris had won the debate, while 38% felt that Pence had. On December 14 the Electoral College confirmed the win, giving the Biden-Harris campaign 306 votes compared to 232 for the Trump–Pence campaign; however, Trump
refused to concede and insisted that he had actually won. Throughout November and December Trump and his campaign filed more than 50 lawsuits alleging election fraud and other irregularities; all of them were eventually rejected by judges. Trump also pressured Republican officials, lawmakers and even
the Justice Department to take actions to overturn the election. In late December 2020, a federal lawsuit was filed against Pence by Republican congressman
Louie Gohmert and 11 Arizona Republicans who would have become presidential electors had Trump actually won Arizona. The plaintiffs sought to give the vice president the power to reject state certified presidential electors in favour of "competing slates of electors" so that Biden's victory over Trump could be overturned. The
United States Department of Justice represented Pence in this case, and argued for its dismissal, stating that the lawsuit was a "walking legal contradiction" because it sought to grant power to the vice president, while suing the vice president. Gohmert then appealed to the Supreme Court, which on January7 tersely "denied" his petition.
Vote counting and storming of the Capitol In January 2021, Trump began to pressure Pence to take action to overturn the election. As vice president, Pence presided over the January 6, 2021,
congressional joint session to count the electoral votes—normally a non-controversial, ceremonial event. In the days leading up to the session, Trump declared both in public and in private that Pence should use that position to overturn the election results in
swing states and declare Trump–Pence the winners of the election. Pence demurred that the
United States Constitution did not give him that power, but Trump falsely insisted that "The Vice President and I are in total agreement that the Vice President has the power to act." According to
The New York Times, multiple sources claim that Trump called Pence before he departed to certify the results urging him again one last time ultimately telling him, "You can either go down in history as a
patriot, or you can go down in history as a
pussy." Before the start of the
Joint Session, Pence stated in a "Dear Colleague" letter that the Constitution prevented him from deciding which electoral votes counted and which did not. According to
Politico, Pence was inspired by
Al Gore presiding over his own defeat twenty years earlier during the
2000 presidential election, when Pence was a newly elected member of Congress. On January 6, 2021, the day on which a joint session of Congress met to
count and certify the results of the Electoral College for the 2020 presidential election, Trump held a rally at which he urged listeners to go to the Capitol and repeatedly expressed the hope that Pence would "do the right thing". Many listeners then marched to the Capitol and
stormed it. On January 15,
The Washington Post reported that Pence came "dangerously close" to the rioters during their occupation of the Capitol. Pence was not evacuated from the Senate chambers until 14 minutes after the initial breach of the Capitol was reported. He and his family were eventually ushered from the Senate chambers into a second-floor hideaway. One minute later, the mob rushed onto a stair landing only 100 feet away, from which they could have seen him enter the room if they had arrived a minute earlier. After his evacuation from the Senate chambers, his Secret Service detail wanted to move him away from the Capitol building but he refused to get in the car. Pence later approved the deployment of the
National Guard, which raised questions as the vice president is not the commander-in-chief. After the Capitol was cleared, Congress resumed its joint session, and officially certified the election results with Pence declaring Biden and Harris the winners. at the
inauguration of Joe Biden During the siege, Trump criticized Pence as lacking "courage". Earlier
L. Lin Wood, a lawyer associated with Trump, had called for Pence to be "executed" by "firing squad". In spite of the threats against Pence, Trump never reached out to Pence or inquired about his safety during the attack on the Capitol, according to sources close to the vice president. Aides believed that Pence was being set up as a
scapegoat for Trump's failure to overturn the results of the election. Pence was described as very angry with Trump. The two did not speak for several days, until January 11 when they met at the White House to discuss the prior week's Capitol siege and the final days of their administration. On January 20, Pence attended the
inauguration of Joe Biden as president of the United States, unlike Trump. Afterwards, he left the Capitol with his successor, Kamala Harris. On April 3, 2025, the
John F. Kennedy Library Foundation announced Pence as the recipient of the JFK
Profile in Courage Award "for putting his life and career on the line to ensure the constitutional transfer of presidential power on Jan. 6, 2021". ==Post-vice presidency (2021–present)==