Jd Vance, Ole Miss and immigration
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Vice President JD Vance has been accused of hypocrisy and “Hindu-phobia” after declaring he wanted his wife to convert to Christianity. Speaking at a Turning Point USA event in Mississippi, Vance was asked by an audience member about his marriage to Usha Vance, America’s first Second Lady of Hindu faith.
During the Turning Point USA event, an attendee went on to ask Vance about the administration’s increased crackdown on immigration. The vice president had earlier advocated for a slowdown in legal immigration — telling the crowd, “We have to get the overall numbers way, way down.”
At the University of Mississippi, the vice president will walk a tightrope as he engages college students in the mode of Charlie Kirk.
JD Vance has ripped those who mistreat dogs as “really terrible,” citing serial killers who start with animal cruelty—but not, notably, his mutt-murdering colleague Kristi Noem. The vice president, 41,
Republican and Democratic lawmakers remain at a stalemate on finding a government funding solution to end what is now the second-longest shutdown in U.S. history.The Senate failed for the 13th time on Tuesday to advance a bill that would reopen the government until Nov.
Vice President JD Vance led a roundtable at the White House with Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy, former New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu, and aviation industry leaders.
J.D. Vance was put on the spot by a MAGA mega fan who challenged him on Donald Trump’s “disturbing” National Guard deployments and their tyrannical ramifications. The vice president was on stage at the University of Mississippi, where he fielded a question from a MAGA hat-wearing teen in the audience.
Appearing on the New York Post’s “Pod Force One” podcast on Wednesday, the vice president revealed that fellow former Trump detractor Marco Rubio is his “best friend” in the Trump administration — and that he and the secretary of state are “very interested” in UFOs, also known as UAPs.
A hypothetical 2028 matchup between Vance and Newsom would see the CA governor with a surprisingly narrow margin over the VP.
Vance took questions from the audience at Turning Point USA's event at the University of Mississippi, with students grilling him on issues like immigration and religion.
Vice President JD Vance told a Turning Point USA crowd that Republicans shouldn’t fear using federal power, arguing the left has done so for decades.