JD Vance said over the weekend that he “learned my lesson” on getting ahead of Donald Trump after accidentally announcing an abortion position Trump later disavowed. He might still have some work to do.
Sen. J.D. Vance (R-OH) is getting out in front of former President Donald Trump in the media and on policy, but his public separation from the top of the ticket isn’t bothering the campaign. After some initial scrutiny and negative media coverage,
The Trump-Vance ticket’s unbridled racist attacks on Haitian immigrants in Ohio – as a proxy for attacking immigrants and people of color everywhere – continue unabated deep into the second week of serving as a centerpiece of a campaign that was searching for a way to gain traction against Kamala Harris.
The transportation secretary, who acted as Mike Pence during Kamala Harris’s preparations for the 2020 vice-presidential debate, is again helping out as Tim Walz gets ready for his Oct. 1 clash.
From attacks on “childless cat ladies” to claims of migrants devouring neighbors’ pets, Senator JD Vance is providing many Americans with their first glimpse of an ultra-online, aggressively combative generation of rabble-rousing conservatism.
A Vance aide was informed by a top Springfield official claims Haitian migrants were eating pets were false, but the VP nominee went ahead with spreading the rumor.
GOP VP candidate Sen. JD Vance, running with former President Donald Trump, will speak in the early evening at the Newtown Sports & Events Center.
Despite his staff learning that the cat-eating story wasn’t true on the day of his first post, Vance doubled down and kept going.
The state is getting lots of political attention. After recent visits from Kamala Harris and Tim Walz, JD Vance rallied in Raleigh on Wednesday.
After Tropical Storm Debby forced him to cancel a visit last month, Ohio senator JD Vance made his first appearance in Raleigh Wednesday afternoon.
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, the Democratic vice-presidential nominee, has accelerated his preparations for his Oct. 1 debate against Sen. JD Vance (R-Ohio), participating in policy sessions and mock debates in his home state and on the road.