Mike Pence Got Through VP Debate Without Having To Explain Anti-LGBT Record

His religious freedom law caused a national backlash against the state of Indiana.

Mike Pence spent the vice presidential debate Tuesday dodging questions about Donald Trump’s statements, often outright denying that the GOP presidential nominee has said things he has actually said. 

It allowed Pence to largely avoid being put on the spot about his own record in Indiana, including his controversial “religious freedom” law. 

As governor, Pence’s most well-known and high-profile issue has been lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender rights. In March 2015, Pence quietly signed a religious freedom law that could have opened the door to widespread discrimination. Business owners who don’t want to serve same-sex couples, for example, would now have legal protections to discriminate.

The national backlash was swift and fierce. In the week that followed, groups withdrew events from the state in protest, and Angie’s List — an Indianapolis-based business run by a former Republican staffer — canceled a planned $40 million expansion of its headquarters. Businesses, including Apple and Marriott, condemned the law, and some states and localities signed orders boycotting Indiana. 

The state even had to hire a public relations firm to the tune of $2 million to help repair its image in the wake of Pence’s law. 

Pence eventually signed a revised version of the law in response to the criticism, explicitly barring a business from denying services to someone on the basis of categories that include sexual orientation and gender identity.

But the law has left a bitter taste for many in Indiana, including some Republicans who weren’t happy that Pence unnecessarily created all this controversy. Because many viewers who tuned in to the one and only vice presidential debate this cycle wanted to hear the candidates comment more on the top of the ticket and administration plans, it gave Pence a chance to get through it without having to answer tough questions about his own legacy on LGBT rights. As noted by Michelangelo Signorile, HuffPost Queer Voices editor-at-large, Pence is rarely asked about the religious freedom law on the campaign trail. 

The only time “LGBT” was mentioned was when Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine, the Democratic vice presidential nominee, brought it up in reference to Russian President Vladimir Putin going after “LGBT folks and journalists.”

During the debate, Pence did go into his record on abortion, which is another issue where he’s made a name for himself nationally both as governor and previously as a member of Congress. 

As governor, Pence signed a bill that would require doctors to offer women the “remains” of the fetus after an abortion, which has no medical purpose. 

“A society can be judged by how it deals with its most vulnerable: the aged, the infirm, the disabled and the unborn,” Pence said Tuesday. “I believe it with all my heart, and I could not be more proud to be standing with a pro-life candidate in Donald Trump.”

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Before You Go

6 Reasons Mike Pence Is Terrible For LGBTQ People
He has supported LGBT discrimination under the banner of "religious freedom."(01 of06)
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In March 2015, Pence signed Indiana's Religious Freedom Restoration Act (or RFRA) into law, effectively legalizing discrimination against LGBT people across the state. The bill, which Vox called "one of the biggest political crises" of Pence's career, allowed business owners to cite their religious beliefs as justification for turning away LGBT customers.

The bill's passage sparked national controversy, and in the end, was reported to have set the state back $250 million. In April 2015, Pence signed a revised version of the bill into law that included language that explicitly barred businesses from denying services to customers on the basis of categories that include sexual orientation and gender identity. Many LGBT rights advocates remained critical of the revisions, saying that Indiana should have repealed the measure altogether.
(credit:CHRIS KEANE / Reuters)
He REALLY opposes same-sex marriage.(02 of06)
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Pence has long been an outspoken opponent of marriage equality, and in floor speeches during his time in Congress, described marriage as being “ordained by God.”

Of the Supreme Court’s 2015 ruling that granted same-sex couples the right to tie the knot nationwide, he reportedly said that he said he was disappointed that SCOTUS had “failed to recognize the historic role of the states in setting marriage policy,” but nonetheless noted that he believed “in the rule of law.”
(credit:Jonathan Ernst / Reuters)
He's opposed hate crime protections for LGBT people.(03 of06)
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In 2009, Pence was an outspoken opponent of the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, which officially expanded federal hate crime legislation to include violence directed at members of the LGBT community.

At the time, Pence blasted President Barack Obama for using the measure to “advance a radical social agenda,” according to USA Today, and argued that the law could be used to curb free speech rights.
(credit:David Becker / Reuters)
He didn't want "Don't Ask, Don't Tell" repealed.(04 of06)
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Pence was no fan of President Obama's decision to repeal "don't ask, don't tell," which banned gay and lesbian people from serving in the armed forces.

In 2010 he told CNN he did not want to see the military become “a backdrop for social experimentation," and said, "We ought to put their interests and the interests of our national security first."
(credit:John Sommers II / Reuters)
He opposed Obama's 2016 transgender bathroom directive.(05 of06)
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In May, Pence spoke out against the Obama administration's directive advising public schools to allow trans students to use the bathroom that best corresponds with their gender identity or risk losing federal funding.

“The federal government has not business getting involved in issues of this nature,” Pence said.
(credit:Jonathan Ernst / Reuters)
His stance on HIV/AIDS prevention is questionable at best.(06 of06)
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In 2000, Pence suggested that money from a program to help those with HIV/AIDS should be repurposed toward organizations that “provide assistance to those seeking to change their sexual behavior,” BuzzFeed reports.

He's also suggested that needle exchange programs, which can be used to help prevent the spread of HIV, encouraged drug use.

Last year, Pence reluctantly allowed for a short-term needle exchange program to be put into place in Indiana following a spike in HIV infections across the state.

"I do not enter into this lightly," he told The Indianapolis Star. "In response to a public health emergency, I'm prepared to make an exception to my long-standing opposition to needle exchange programs."
(credit:Andrew Kelly / Reuters)