PHILADELPHIA —U.S. Vice-President Mike Pence and his family live with two cats, a rabbit and a snake at their official residence on the grounds of the U.S. Naval Observatory in Washington.

That makes them “low-class,” according to his boss, who said he was “embarrassed” by the menagerie, and who labelled the Pences “yokels,” according to the Atlantic magazine.

So now, President Donald Trump, whose statements have offended immigrants, Muslims, the disabled, women, prisoners of war, and even Arnold Schwarzenegger, has insulted one of the most passionate (and numerous) subsets of Americans there is:

Pet people.

“Oh, you kind of expect something like this from him,” hissed Ed Smith, 50, who had just treated his shih tzu, Frankie, to some kibble and Christmas presents from a Pet Smart in northeast Philadelphia. “Animals just make you love them, you know. They’re just good.”

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For his part, James Serpell, a professor of ethics and animal welfare at the University of Pennsylvania school of veterinary medicine, said, “Mr. Trump has got it wrong,” adding that pet ownership isn’t “low-class” at all.

In fact, he said, owning an animal “has remained a respectable middle-class activity” since the 19th century.

And not just the middle class.

Museums are filled with paintings of the well-fed, well-to-do posing with their pets — mostly dogs, many of which were bred by kings, queens and clergy — noted sociologist Linda Kalof of Michigan State University, editor of the Oxford Handbook of Animal Studies.

Nearly 64 per cent of U.S. residents who live in households making $85,000 a year or more own pets, according to the American Veterinary Medical Association.

Overall, around two-thirds of U.S. households have pets, said Leslie Irvine, a sociologist at the University of Colorado.

“People across the socioeconomic spectrum love animals and have all kinds of pets,” said Irvine, whose well-known book, My Dog Always Eats First, chronicles pet ownership among the homeless. “Even people with no resources find ways to take care of them.”

We love and need animals, she said, because “pets are nonjudgmental and provide structure for our lives.”

Dogs are the most popular of pets: Almost half of all U.S. households own one compared with 38 per cent that own cats, according to the 2017 National Pet Owners Survey by the American Pet Products Association, a trade group. Forty-six per cent of households are like the Pences: owners of multiple pets.

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Horse owners have the highest average household incomes, followed by bird, fish, dog and small-animal owners, the survey said.

Rural people often have dogs and cats to guard their property, and keep deer or mice away, said David Blouin, a sociologist and an expert on human-animal interactions at Indiana University. In the city, pets are more seen as family members, he said.

Jeane Brody, 58, of Wallingford, Pa., who fosters animals, said Trump’s apparent misunderstanding of pet-human bonding explains why he’s one of the only presidents not to bring an animal companion into the White House.

“If you don’t like pets, fine,” said Brody, an adjunct art history professor at Villanova University who volunteers for Providence Animal Center in Media, Pa. “But don’t denigrate Pence for having them.”

Although historical records aren’t completely accurate, it appears that James Polk, in office from 1845 to 1849, was the only other U.S. president who didn’t have animals.

Other presidents made up for the Polk-Trump lack, however.

George Washington supposedly had eight dogs, a parrot and a bunch of horses; Thomas Jefferson owned two bears and a mockingbird; Theodore Roosevelt oversaw a veritable zoo, including a hyena, a badger and 21 other creatures; while, for some reason, Herbert Hoover possessed two alligators. More modern presidents settled for cats and dogs.

One would-be president, Mitt Romney, was a dog owner, but he famously drew the ire of pet owners everywhere after they learned he’d once strapped a dog carrier containing his Irish setter, Seamus, to the roof rack of his Chevrolet station wagon.

As for Trump’s reportedly calling his own vice-president a yokel for liking animals, Temple University sociologist Matt Wray said the president was simply “projecting his own inferiority onto Pence,” since the Queens-born Trump himself was seen as a yokel by the Manhattan elite “who never took him seriously.”

It’s not as though Trump has gone through life dogless, of course. He did live for a time with Chappy, the poodle of his first wife Ivana, she wrote in her memoir, Raising Trump.

“Donald was not a dog fan,” she wrote. “And Chappy had an equal dislike of Donald.”

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