It is rare that something causes a vice president to abandon a publicized trip once aboard a plane. Penceâs aides said that there was no national security emergency or personal health issue that prompted the change. They said that he had boarded the plane but that it never took off. They would not say much else.
âSomething came up that required the @VP to remain in Washington, DC. Itâs no cause for alarm. He looks forward to rescheduling the trip to New Hampshire very soon,â Penceâs press secretary, Alyssa Farah, wrote on Twitter.
With little information to go on, theories abounded on Twitter. Pence might have been facing a national security emergency and been pulled back, people speculated. Or maybe there was a political drama taking place, with Trump summoning his second in command.
An hour later, Farah posted again.
âThe @VP never left Washington, DC. There was no âemergency callback.â Something came up that required the VP to stay in DC. Weâll reschedule NH shortly,â she tweeted.
Later, officials helped rule out possibilities, without saying what had taken place.
âItâs not a national security issue,â Penceâs chief of staff, Marc Short, told reporters at the White House.
It also was not a âpersonalâ or a family issue, he said.
Short had been scheduled to travel with Pence to New Hampshire, where the vice president was to visit with patients at a drug-treatment center in Salem and deliver remarks on the opioid crisis. He was able to speak to what had taken place, but that did not mean he would, at least for now.
âWhen would people know what happened?â reporters asked. âWeeks from now,â Short said.
Multiple people familiar with what happened offered at least a partial explanation. They said it was related to the place Pence was scheduled to visit, the Granite Recovery Center, but they did not offer any details.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.