Behind Mike Pence’s Corn-Tasseled Mask

The vice president’s anecdote about growing up with a cornfield in his backyard is the kind of partial truth that defines his political style

Tom LoBianco
GEN

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U.S. Vice President Mike Pence arrives to meet Prime Minister Boris Johnson at №10 Downing St. on September 5, 2019, in London, England. Photo: Peter Summers/Getty Images

WWhen I started the journey of writing a biography of Vice President Mike Pence, I obsessed over a throwaway phrase he often uses when dismissing questions about his presidential ambitions.

“I’m a small-town kid who grew up with a cornfield in the backyard and dreaming of serving my country in public office.”

This “aw shucks” response is intended as a deflection, but it is also meant to conjure the image of Pence as the modest, God-fearing guy-next-door that plays so well with his conservative (and mostly rural) base of voters.

But that’s all it is: an image. And a carefully and long-crafted one at that.

If I’ve learned anything from my earliest days covering Pence for the Associated Press through the years I spent reporting Piety & Power: Mike Pence and the Taking of the White House, it’s that the cornfield bit is the centerpiece of his carefully crafted public mask, a press-release version of his life that implies more divine coincidence and hides his political acumen and ambition.

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Tom LoBianco
GEN
Writer for

Author forthcoming Mike Pence biography, “Piety and Power” https://amzn.to/2Rr5qEn Proud papa and husband. Frmr AP, CNN, WashTimes, more. “ … a brick!”