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9.
He (along with his brothers) was an altar boy at St. Columba Catholic Church.
10.
From a family of Irish Catholic Democrats, one of his heroes as a boy was the nation’s first Irish Catholic president. “In my early youth,” he once told Craig Fehrman, “I was very inspired by the life of John Kennedy.” He made a JFK “memory box” with pictures and clippings. He volunteered as a youth coordinator for the Bartholomew County Democratic Party.
11.
His family called him “Bubbles” because (as Greg Pence put it) “he was chubby and funny.”
12.
At Columbus North High School he was mostly a C student and “the fourth-string center” on the football team. He showed promise, however, in public speaking, performing well in competitions put on by the local Optimist Club and the National Forensic League.
13.
At Hanover College, a small, conservative, Presbyterian school in Hanover, Indiana, he attended Catholic Mass on Sunday nights. But he also in the spring of his freshman year attended a Christian music festival in Kentucky with some evangelical friends and began a transition to having “a deep realization that what had happened on the cross in some infinitesimal way had happened for me.”
14.
He joined the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity — the Fijis — and was elected the president of the frat as a sophomore. Alcohol on campus was not allowed. Hanover was dry. One time an associate dean arrived to bust up a party. Pence led him straight to the keg.
15.
The fall of his senior year he voted for Jimmy Carter over Ronald Reagan and wrote his senior thesis on “The Religious Expressions of Abraham Lincoln” — a 37-page paper biographer Tom LoBianco described as “long-winded and plodding, with a careful approach to the research but an apprehension to come to clear conclusions.”
16.
After graduation he thought about becoming a Catholic priest. He opted for law school instead. He had to take the LSAT twice to score well enough to get into Indiana University’s law school. He didn’t like it much but muddled through. “No one I know likes law school. It was a bad experience,” he said in 1994. “I wouldn’t wish it on a dog I didn’t like.”
17.
In law school, as in college, as in high school, he dabbled in cartooning. “Michael’s hilarious,” his mother once said.
18.
He met Karen Sue Batten at a Catholic church in Indianapolis in 1983. The first time he called her he hung up without saying a word. Then he called her back. She invited him over for dinner and made him a taco salad. A few days later they went ice skating at the Indianapolis fairgrounds. Nine months after they started dating, he proposed by hiding a ring in a loaf of bread, which they later shellacked. They were married in 1985 in a Catholic ceremony.
19.
They struggled to have kids, paying $10,000 for fertility treatments that were an IVF alternative approved by the Catholic church. No luck. After six years, though, they finally conceived, and they have three children — Michael Jr. (born in 1991), Charlotte (1993) and Audrey (1994).
20.
He was an unremarkable lawyer, handling mostly small-claims and family cases. In the Indianapolis legal world, wrote Jane Mayer of the New Yorker, there was a certain hierarchy, and he was not near the top. “But the great American story is that a guy like Mike Pence,” one attorney told Mayer in 2017, “is now vice president.”
21.
He started running for Congress in 1988 when he was all of 29 and lost. He ran for Congress in 1990. And lost. He campaigned partly by pedaling around the district on a single-speed bicycle. He used campaign donations to pay personal bills — $992 a month for his mortgage, $222 a month for his wife’s car, approximately $13,000 in all — a practice that wasn’t illegal at the time but still was politically unwise. He commissioned an especially odious attack ad in which an actor dressed cartoonishly as an Arab sheikh “thanked” his opponent for being a tool of foreign oil. “Pence Urges Clean Campaign, Calls Opponent a Liar,” read a headline in the Indianapolis Star. “Mike burned a lot of bridges,” Greg Pence said. “He upset a lot of his backers. It was partly because of immaturity, but he really was kind of full of shit.”
22.
He got a job in 1991 as the president of a small conservative think tank called the Indiana Policy Review Foundation, and became a board member of the anti-gay, anti-abortion Indiana Family Institute. He and some pals studied The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People.
23.
He wrote an essay in the Indiana Policy Review in the fall of 1991 called “Confessions of a Negative Campaigner.” It opened with a Bible verse — 1 Timothy 1:15 — “Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners …” Pence wrote: “Negative campaigning, I now know, is wrong.”
24.
Through most of the 1990s in Indiana, identifying as “an evangelical Catholic,” he worked as a conservative talk radio host — referring to himself as “His Mikeness” and “Rush Limbaugh on decaf.” In 1994, “The Mike Pence Show” was on 18 Emmis Communications stations, five days a week. “His political aspirations,” a former Pence radio colleague once said, “were never far behind that microphone.”
25.
He was at the time an off-air pundit, too. “Global warming is a myth,” he wrote. “Smoking doesn’t kill,” he wrote. And what now looks like a proto-DeSantis-on-Disney, he took to task the 1998 movie “Mulan,” writing: “I suspect that some mischievous liberal at Disney assumes that Mulan’s story will cause a quiet change in the next generation’s attitude about women in combat and they might be right.” Having women in the military, Pence concluded, was a “bad idea.”
26.
He decided to run for Congress again in 2000 on a trip to a Colorado dude ranch when he saw two red-tailed hawks soaring in the sky. “Those two birds are us,” he said to his wife. “If those two birds are us, then I think we should do it. But we should do it just like the birds … spread our wings and let God take us wherever He wants us … No flapping,” his wife said.