JD and Usha Vance on faith and family
Key Points:
- Vice President JD Vance and his wife Usha, parents to three young children with a fourth on the way, reside in the vice president's official residence, where Vance reflects on his 2019 conversion to Catholicism and its impact on his life and politics in his upcoming book "Communion: Finding My Way Back to Faith."
- Vance credits his faith with providing stability amid a tumultuous upbringing and personal challenges, contrasting his skepticism toward therapy with the grounding he finds in church, a perspective supported by his wife Usha, an attorney and former Supreme Court clerk raised in the Hindu faith.
- The Vances were influenced to expand their family partly by the tragic death of conservative organizer Charlie Kirk, with conversations about life and legacy motivating them to welcome a fourth child.
- On foreign policy, Vance expressed cautious support for the U.S. military actions against Iran, emphasizing the importance of preventing Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons while acknowledging skepticism toward prolonged foreign entanglements shaped by his Marine Corps experience.
- Looking ahead, Vance acknowledges discussions with President Trump about his political future, including the possibility of seeking the presidency in 2028, though no definitive plans have been made, and he expects Trump's support regardless of his decisions.