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Pence Explains Why He Didn’t Go on Church Walk With Trump

Defunding of Police Could Lead to Truckers Refusing to Deliver

Trucking companies and experts have expressed their concerns following the “defund the police” movement in the wake of the police custody death of George Floyd on May 25. In a recent poll by CDLLife—the largest community for truck drivers—77 percent of truckers said they will refuse to deliver to cities that had defunded their police departments. Many truckers have been fearful of their safety and what might happen if there are no police departments in the city. Truckers have been on the front lines the last few months, in both the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus pandemic and the protests over police brutality. On Friday, Minneapolis City Council unanimously passed a veto-proof resolution to pursue replacing its police department with a “community-led public safety system.” In other parts of the…

Pence Explains Why He Didn’t Go on Church Walk With Trump

Vice President Mike Pence said he didn’t accompany President Donald Trump to St. John’s Church because of the volatility of the protests and riots around the White House.

“I was actually encouraged to stay at the White House out of an abundance of caution,” Pence told CBS News Radio Friday.

“It was obviously a volatile environment at moments, and so I was encouraged to remain. But I would have been happy to walk shoulder to shoulder across Lafayette Park with President Trump.”

Trump and a group of officials, including Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Mark Milley, Attorney General William Barr, and senior advisor Ivanka Trump, traveled on June 1 from the White House to the church, crossing through Lafayette Park.

Trump held a Bible and stood by the church as the group surveyed damage inflicted during riots sparked by the death of George Floyd, a black man who perished in policy custody in Minneapolis on Memorial Day.

Pence Explains Why He Didn’t Go on Church Walk With Trump President Donald Trump holds a family Bible while visiting St. John’s Church across from the White House in Washington on June 1, 2020. (Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images)

Milley later apologized for being part of the group, claiming it “created a perception of the military involved in domestic politics.”

Asked about Milley’s remarks, Pence said: “I have great respect for General Milley. He’s leading our Joint Chiefs of Staff with great distinction. And I respect his ability to speak for himself about his presence there. But I must tell you that I thought it was important after we saw one of the most historic churches in America set ablaze by rioters and violent protests that the president walk across Lafayette Park and stand in solidarity.”

“We don’t allow places of worship to be burned in this country. We don’t stand by while churches, or synagogues, or mosques are vandalized and the president made that very clear in his walk and I’m glad that this is an administration that has stood strong for the religious freedom of every American of every faith,” he added.

Every president since James Madison has worshipped at the church, Pence noted. The administration’s quelling of violence in Washington, which allowed peaceful protests to continue, was an “important accomplishment,” he said.

Trump on Thursday said Milley’s remarks were “fine” before saying he believes he has “good relationships with the military.”

Milley, a Trump nominee, is the nation’s highest ranking military official.

Pence Explains Why He Didn’t Go on Church Walk With Trump A group of delegates participate in a discussion with Vice President Mike Pence, center, at the Covenant Church of Pittsburgh in Wilkinsburg, Pa., June 12, 2020. (Keith Srakocic/AP Photo)

Pence was speaking after meeting with black leaders in Pennsylvania.

Ross Owens, a local pastor, told Pence, “I’m tired that people still do not acknowledge that systemic racism is real, and they ignore the billions of voices that exist, and they say, ‘No, that’s not true,’ because of the comfort of their own bubble.”

Racism does exist in America like it does in every other nation, Pence said in the radio interview. He thinks every American can be proud of the progress the nation has made over the centuries and credited people of faith with spurring much of the progress.

“We’ve made progress. We have a ways to go,” he said.

The administration is focused on not just progress in public safety, but job creation, educational choice in inner cities, and better healthcare, Pence added.

“The truth is, many African-American families, for more than half a century, have lived under failed liberal Democrat policies and leadership,” he asserted, while arguing that Trump enacted policies that led to low black unemployment and an expansion of educational choice.

Focus News: Pence Explains Why He Didn’t Go on Church Walk With Trump

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An Australian man has been sentenced to death in China for drug smuggling. Cam Gillespie was arrested with more than 7.5 kilograms of methamphetamine in his check-in luggage in 2013 while attempting to board an international flight from Baiyun Airport in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou. The Guangzhou Intermediate People’s Court also ordered that all of Gillespie’s personal property be confiscated, news agency DPA reported. Australia’s Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade said it was providing consular assistance to Gillespie. “We are deeply saddened to hear of the verdict made in his case,” a DFAT spokesperson said in a statement. “Australia opposes the death penalty, in all circumstances for all people. We support the universal abolition of the death penalty and are committed to pursuing this goal through all…